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Saturday, March 2, 2019

Monster Verses Monster

Today, people still recognize the ghastly, atrocious Frankenstein as a monster, but according to Deems Taylors Monster, Richard Wagner is the monstrous beast. Monsters are expected to be frightening like Frankenstein, but some monsters are real cosmos like Richard Wagner. Oddly, when comparing Frankenstein and Wagnerthey certainly share some of the same puritanical features. Frankenstein and Wagners faces manifest a gloomy expression of black death. Their spirit for support lacks warmth in their eyes. Frankensteins eyes are hollow and non-white coered with drooping, eyelids, and underneath his eyes are vast sandbags.Similarly, Wagners revengeful gaze leers inertly like a frozen statue. Taylor says, he has a genius for fashioning enemies (695). The pasty bags (sagging above his cheekbones) are blown up like cable pockets. Moreover, they share similar shriveled lips. Frankensteins colorless lips are dimly distorted like the mouth of a ruined, porcelain doll. While Wagners, sick ly, pale lips sex a spine-chilling eeriness causing most people to shutter its the kind that makes the skin crawl with goose bumps. Undoubtedly, their cold expressions are lifeless, and wrong however, the size and shape of their heads are equally dreadful.Their large, peculiar, heads resemble a difficult mass wobbling like a bobble head. Their foreheads dominate their wide skulls. Frankensteins forehead is like a stretched- stoogevas awning for protection over his eyes. It protrudes along his brow like a piece of metal rod lodged underneath his skin. Likewise, Wagners receding hairline emphasizes the size of his enormous skull. According to Taylor, he states, his head is too big for his body (693). Furthermore, the structure of their chins is abnormally malformed. Frankensteins square chin bulks like a block of wood secure into his bottom jaw.Its size is the dimension of a small building. On the other hand, Wagners narrow, pointy chin extends like an arrow heading for its tar get. Indeed, the likeness of Frankenstein and Wagners massive skulls are laughably creepy. Nonetheless, the magnitude of resemblance is uncanny. All the same, the fearsome expressions on a face or the bizarre proportions of a body can depict a vision of a monster. Frankenstein is a character, created, monster, but Wagner is a real person a monster in the eyes of Taylor. As attested by Taylor, the name of his monster is Richard Wagner (695).

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