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Grenouille Is A Monster

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Grenouille Is A Monster
This world has been exposed to the ideas of many monsters, such as imaginary creatures and unreal humanoids. These monsters' goal is to either protect or kill with purpose. In both the readings and films of Frankenstein and Perfume the feeling of love, hate, guilt, etc. of sympathy and the creation by all good people in the world of these "monsters" happens.
In the novel Perfume by Patrick Suskind, the author represents this monster as Grenouille. Suskind has this character that on purpose murders many people for their scent, without having nothing to do with their age, or maturity. Grenouille is a monster as he uses something the wrong way the power of scent to escape worldly problems and attract love. He has an angry feeling against the kindness of people that not only affects characters from young girls to his own mother. Grenouille is showed/represented as a monster because he is the cause of death for most characters in the novel, wrong and bad uses of things the power of scent, and hates the kindness of people. Grenouille was the agent of all deaths including the 24 women, his mother, and all his caretakers. He treated or used in a very mean,
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Rarely is a human left to his own devices to raise himself from the time when a person is a child. It would certainly be an unpleasant experience, having no protector, no one to care for you, no one to help you discover the feelings of love, hate, fear, etc. humans are capable of feeling. Sympathy is well deserved to any creatures that are thrust into the world with no guidance, left to learn the cruelness of the world on their own. Victor leaves alone and forgets about his creation, which is almost the same as a mother leaving alone and forgetting her child. "Yet you, my creator, hate and encouraged me, they creature, to whom you are bound by ties only dissolvable by the destruction of one of us." (Shelley

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