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| Wells, H.G.: The invisible man
Wells, H.G.: The invisible man
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a novel by
H.G WELLS
PPC
THE INVISIBLE MAN
One wintry, cold and snowy February day Griffin arrives at the Coach and
Horses Inn in Iping. The hospitality of Mr. and Mrs. Hall, who are the owner of
this inn, is absolutely great. But something seems to be very strange for them
because Griffin doesn’t want to take off his clothes. Only his nose could
be seen by other people.
He tells that he was an experimental investigator and that he has had an
accident and uses this as a reason for non taking of his clothes. People think
that Griffin is a very strange person. At the Iping Hangar tavern Fearnside
remarks to Teddy Henfrey that the strange guest at the inn must be black since
there was only blackness where his dog has bitten the fellow, nothing that even
looked like skin. Another odd thing is the luggage of the stranger. When the
first crate is brought into the parlor, the stranger sets upon it avidly,
emptying it of the various shaped bottles it contains and scattering the straw
about the floor. He maintains this pace until six cases are emptied of a great
abundance of bottles.
In the still hours before dawn on Whit Monday, the vicarage is burglarised.
Rev. Mr. Bunting can not see a visible invader and is not able to catch the
thief. Very early on Whit Monday Mr. and Mrs. Hall discover the room of the
stranger to be empty and the only clothes the guest is known to possess are
scattered about. Once in the room, incredible things occur. Bedclothes, the
stranger’s hat, a chair and other objects go flying through the air.
At about half past five in the morning Griffin enters the parlor of the
Coach and Horses Inn. With the news of a burglary at the vicarage he is
immediately suspected. Mrs. Hall raves that there were some things which the
experimental investigator should explain. Suddenly the stranger shows his
invisibility. The invisible man is now a hunted creature. The invisible
man’s sanctuary in the inn is gone, and he has been driven out of doors
like a wild beast. There will be a little, if any, rest or peace for him from
now on.
Next he meets Mr. Thomas Marvel who is a bachelor and something of a tramp.
He promises to do everything what Griffin wants him to do. Mr. Marvel visits the
little town Iping. When Mr. Huxter first spies the curious Mr. Marvel near the
inn, Cuss and Rev. Mr. Bunting are in the parlor of that establishment closely
examining the invisible man’s possession.
Some of the invisible man’s notebooks are written in Greek. As a
result of this Griffin loses his temper and gets very angry. It is important to
note here that the invisible man has now turned on humanity.
On the following morning Mr. Marvel and the experimental investigator come
to Port Stowe. At the Jolly Cricketers’ pub the barmen blocks up every
door when he gets to know from Mr. Marvel that the invisible man could be there.
However, nobody is able to catch him and Griffin tries to reach Dr. Kemps room,
whom he knows from University College. When Dr. Kemp comes back to his room and
notices something very strange; the invisible man begins to talk with the
Doctor.
Now Wells is beginning to fill the background of the invisible man. Wells,
of course, was himself a man of science; he won a scholarship to the Royal
College of Science where he was privileged to study under the renowned Thomas
Henrey Huxley. Here is a touch of the autobiographical, something of
Wells’ own history taken from the past, reshaped and fitting into the
background of the invisible man.
There is a long conversation between Dr. Kemp and Griffin. Griffin narrates
that he has stolen money from his father, but it was not his father’s
money, he was disgraced, and the older man was driven to suicide. The invisible
man adds that he has to get those books back which Thomas Marvel has at the
moment. The secret of invisibility is written down there.
It should be noted that he obviously takes drugs. The strychnine
invigorated but simultaneously made him sharp and irritable. There is reason to
believe then that some of his violent conduct may be rooted in self-prescribed
drugs or stimulants. Evidence his great temper and, violent moods and responses
are seen, and there is increasing evidence of madness. In the coldness of his
scientific objectivity, his humanity has suffered dearly.
The blessings of invisibility imagined by Griffin have proved to be a
nightmare in reality. The total freedom he foresaw has become an endless threat
of danger and injury. Ironically, his invisibility has drawn attention to him a
dogs sniff at a thing they cannot see and passers-by, spying footprints that
march off by themselves, pursue him eagerly. Like a child let loose in a candy
shop, the invisible man has quickly tired of his incredible freedom and has
discovered what an insuperable burden it really is. Griffin`s madness becomes
all too evident.
What had been curious dreaming about an extraordinary freedom coupled with
invisibility has now become a maniacal drive to terrorise and kill, to strike
fear into humanity. This seems almost a defensive response on Griffin`s part.
He has had an agonising time of it and has come to interpret man`s
understandable reactions to invisibility as hateful stupidity and clumsiness.
His response is violent and a reign of terror on his part is almost totally
comprised of spite and revenge. Beneath it all is a mind twisted into homicidal
imbalance, impulsively violent and wildly obsessed now with the notion of
self-preservation.
There is a struggle between Dr. Kemp and Griffin, the invisible man hurts
Dr. Kemp and gets free. From now Griffin is a really hunted person. Besides a
Mr. Wicksteed has been murdered by an invisible creature. It seems that the
Reign of Terror commences; Port Burdock is now under the control of the
invisible man; death for Kemp is coming.
At Kemps house an enormous struggle begins. Colonel Adey and Kemp himself
are very scared of the strange invisible man who has become mad. Mr. Heelas, the
neighbour of Dr. Kemp, did never believe this invisible man nonsense, but now he
is a believer in the invisible man. The experimental investigator is chased by
many people. At the end he is killed. In a short time the body of Griffin
becomes visible once again – a young man of about thirty, an albino, his
face distorted and his eyes shining like garnets.
Somehow the final victory over the invisible man seems a hollow one. Lying
there in the street, visible once more, he is more pitiful than terrible. His
great torment and suffering seem more real now. Here are the remains of a
twisted and maddened human, driven to destruction by the perverted brilliance of
his own mind: Griffin, the alien, the outcast, feared, hunted and finally
killed. He had reached into the unknown areas of science, and the unknown has
always frightened man. He was brilliant, but his humanity was frail, and he
could not maintain his discovery in proper perspective.
Wells allows us to sympathise with Griffin. He is mad and remorseless, but
his fellow men are no help. Kemp too pays for his betrayal; and it must strike
the reader as appropriately ironic that Kemp, the hunter and betrayer, is
himself pursued and denied sanctuary as the invisible man was. Ironic, too, is
the fact that the shutting of the houses and shops was his own idea. Kemp is a
good man, but with a sense of justice Wells allows him to taste for a while some
of the pain and terror that the invisible Griffin had known
constantly.
CHARACTER ANALYSIS / PERSONAL OPINION
Griffin:
Griffin had been a brilliant young chemist and researcher, confined and
unappreciated as an instructor in a small English college. His brilliance had
led him to investigations in physics and the properties of light. It is
interesting to observe that as his passion for experiment and his devotion to
pure scientific investigations accelerated, there was a companion deterioration
of his conscience and sense of morality. Nothing was important enough to stand
in his way. When he required money to advance his experiments in invisibility,
he stole it from his father. It was not the father`s money, and the result was
suicide and burial in disgrace. Griffin suffered neither remorse nor grief, and
yet the roots of guilt were there, for in his dreams he pictured himself thrown
into this father`s grave and buried along with him.
Griffin was quick to anger, due perhaps to a naturally irascible
disposition, but aggravated to a degree, it seems, by the taking of drugs and
stimulants. What may have begun as quick temper and impatience rapidly
deteriorated into violent rage and a homicidal bent. Madness, too, appears to
have set in, but in causes are several. Griffin`s deterioration is self-induced
to a considerable extent, but his alienation from his own kind is greatly
assisted by other human beings. Fear and superstition follow him, and it is
often a defensive mechanism of the human species to lash out and destroy that
which it fears and does not understand. Griffin`s alienation becomes complete,
and society hunts him down as it would an animal, finally beating to death this
invisible monstrosity.
Is the guilt all Griffin`s? Wells does not treat his character in a totally
cold manner. Griffin is brilliant, but he has brought a grandly naive quality to
his dreams of invisibility. He is rather harshly and painfully restored to a
sense of reality as he is chased by dogs, hunted down in a department store,
nearly run over in the streets, and constantly subjected to the discomfort of
exposure and the affliction of head colds. He is a man caught in a trap of his
own making, but his situation is aggravated by frequent accidents and
misunderstanding. Then, of course, he is betrayed by the only person in whom he
placed confidence. Perhaps it was Dr. Kemp`s duty to report a man whom he was
convinced was a homicidal maniac. Still, the reader cannot help but sympathize
somewhat with Griffin in his wild unreasoning desire for vengeance and his keen
sense of having been betrayed by a friend and fellow man of science.
Griffin`s end is tragic, but it is the culmination of the tragic course he
had followed since he first ventured into the unknown terrors of
invisibility.
Dr. Kemp:
Griffin feels a bond with Kemp because they had attended the same
university and are both men of science. Dr. Kemp, however, has never allowed the
scientist`s necessary objectivity to overwhelm his own humanity as is the case
with Griffin. Kemp is down to earth and, while perhaps not possessing Griffin`s
inventive genius, has maintained a sense of balance. Kemp, of course, is not a
violent man, and he is quick to detect that Griffin`s erratic and mercurial
temper is a potentially dangerous thing. We may wince somewhat at his betrayal
of Griffin; the reader instinctively cheers the underdog, but Kemp`s concern is
for the violence and harm this dangerous man may do to others. At this point he
is a potential murderer, and the trust and confidence he places in Kemp only
make that doctor`s betrayal of that faith all the more difficult to accomplish
in good conscience.
As a literary creation Kemp is important technically for he acts as
something of a foil for Griffin`s fury. He is the opposite side of the coin, a
balancing device for Griffin`s excessiveness.
Contrast In Scientific Types:
In Kemp and Griffin, Wells dramatises two different types of scientific
approach. Griffin is a throwback to the medieval alchemist, who sought
scientific truth for secret, private power; in this sense, Griffin is the early
Faustian scientist. Kemp is the modern researcher who publishes his own findings
and expects to share in the discoveries of other scientists: concerned with the
advancement not of self but of human knowledge, he is the Baconian
scientist.
THE INVISIBLE MAN
Griffin is a young ambitious scientist, an albino and outcast whose aim is
to invent invisibility. He needs money in order to finance his researches and
for that reason he robs his father. After that his father shoots himself because
Griffin has realised too late that this hadn’t been his father’s
money.
At this moment the scientist lives in a lodging-house in a slum near
Portland Street, London. There he is able to become invisible and fires the
house of his landlord, a polish Jew, because this is the only way to cover his
trail. The “fire” is one of Wells’s Leitmotifs. The
researcher is playing with fire, in that case with invisibility. It’s a
metaphor which appears in some parts of the book.
The first disadvantages of invisibility appear now. When Griffin walks
through Oxford Street, his footsteps are seen by other people. – The
hunting for the invisible man begins. Griffin enters the department store
“Omniums” where he wants to get some clothes but he is very clumsy
because “the sound of his movement made people aaraware of him” and
has to take shelter. “Sound” is the second Leitmotif which
Wells uses. Although Griffin is a genius he seems to be very stupid and unsure.
That’s the contrast of his character and appears through the whole book.
The third Leitmotif is nakedness. To be invisible Griffin can’t
wear clothes, otherwise he would be seen by other people. He has to be naked and
this leads to another major problem, namely the unsureness of the character of
the invisible man. During the whole work Griffin develops from a quite normal
human being into a dangerous beast, into a cruel creature.
The invisible man decides to move to a town called Iping, where he takes up
residence in the Coach and Horses inn in order to research. The Halls are the
owners of this inn. Mrs. Hall is a very curious lady and the reason why Griffin
shows his invisibility. Things develop and all inhabitants of the town get to
know that Griffin is invisible. He is hunted again.
If the invisible man had not lost his temper and shown that he is
invisible, nobody would no. That’s another part where Wells points out how
primitive the brilliant scientist really is in one way.
Next Griffin meets the tramp Marvel and wants him to be his obedient
servant. He is very scared and does what Griffin expects him to do at first, but
when they come to Port Stowe, Marvel tells the barmen at the Jolly
Cricketers’ pub that the invisible man could be there. After this incident
the experimental investigator comes together with Dr. Kemp which he knows from
university. Dr. Kemp is the opposite of Griffin. Griffin is a real scientist. He
wouldn’t adopt discoveries of other researchers, whereas Dr. Kemp would do
everything to get the inventions of his colleges.
When Dr. Kemp, who first seems to be a friend of Griffin, betrays him, the
invisible man’s madness becomes all too evident. What had been curious
dreaming about an extraordinary freedom coupled with invisibility has now become
a maniacal drive to terrorise and kill, to strike fear into humanity.
Griffin’s response is violence and a reign of terror.
Society has resisted the invisible man and in the end he is beaten and
kicked and dies. That’s another aspect which Wells tries to cover behind
the “mad scientist” theme. Not only the conflict between knowledge
and goodness comes to the foreground but also the reactions of society which
cause the enormous discord of the researcher. Very often society is the reason
for odd reactions of human beings.
As we know from Wells’ biography he was a socialist and in this story
he confirms this fact, because everybody has turned against the invisible man,
the scientist Dr. Kemp as well as Marvel the tramp, there are no social
barriers, all man are meant to be equal. Wells tries to break up the class
system.
The ending of this book is the last absurd and ironic element. Marvel the
tramp got the money and the diary of the experimental investigator. He has
opened an inn, and tells everybody what has happened to him after that time,
when there had been an invisible man. And every Sunday he takes out
Griffin’s notes and says that he wouldn’t have done what the
researcher did he’d just, well....
And so ends this ironic and dramatic “scientific romance”.
THE INVISIBLE MAN
This story is about a scientist called Griffin who made a brilliant
invention. But not thinking of the result of this he is killed by people who
where scared of him.
At first he comes to Iping a little town in England where he wants to stay
in order to research. Griffin found out how human beings could become invisible
and that was one reason why he left home. He is not able to get visible again
which will become a major problem of this man. When things develop the
inhabitants of the town find out that Griffin is invisible and immediately he is
a hunted creature. The invisible man meets Dr. Kemp whom he knows very well
because they went to the same university. But Kemp traits Griffin and wants him,
like everybody, to be caught. At last the invisible man is killed in a struggle.
There are some important devices in this book. Dr. Kemp is the opposite of
Griffin. He doesn’t invent things himself whereas Griffin would never
adopt an invention of somebody else. Mrs. Hall is a very curious person and she
is the reason why he showed his invisibility. This dramatic ending would not
have to be happened if society had excepted the invisible man. He just was a
strange, not understood outcast. He was different.
There are some other problems which concern the situation of Griffin. He
didn’t realise what it ment to be invisible. He was not aware of the
consequence of his invention. This leads us to the conclusion that scientists
are men who can be very dangerous and that society plays an important part in
the life of such a person who is regarded as an outcast by other people. - Very
often or almost every time society is the reason for odd reactions of human
beings.
H. G. Wells writes in a quite ironic, dramatic way with a comic effect.
Wells himself is a pessimistic person which we also get to know from his books.
“The invisible man” was written in 1897 and counts to the
“scientific romances” which he wrote between 1895 and
1908.
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