With a quick nod to Bill Shakespeare in order (it's both his birth and death day 4.23.1564 - 4.23.1616), it's fitting and relevant that we looked at a work today that has author overlap with Shakespeare. Not quite a contemporary of Shakespeare, John Milton ( b. 1608) nevertheless wrote with similar language structure as did the Shakes, his most famous of which is his Paradise Lost. This tells the back story of what led to the guile-filled serpent, who deceives Eve into choosing to eat of the fruit that God had forbidden. The connection with Satan's "thumping-out-of-heaven" to our Frankenstein novel is quite deliberate (see chapter 15, pages 127 and following).
The question you have to ask yourself is why does the monster feel more connection with Lucifer, the fallen angel, than he does with Adam, the fallen human? What connections can you make?
The question you have to ask yourself is why does the monster feel more connection with Lucifer, the fallen angel, than he does with Adam, the fallen human? What connections can you make?