English, asked by atulemamigroup, 7 months ago

who helps the invisible Man in his misdeeds and why did he do so.​

Answers

Answered by futureallabout
1

Explanation:

The Invisible Man

In the story of The Invisible Man, a mysterious man goes to a village called Iping, which is in the middle of a snowstorm. He then stays in an inn that is owned and run by the husband and wife George and Janny Hall. They ask him to not be worried about the storm, so he goes to his room with his luggage. This man’s name is Griffin, a scientist, who usually spends his time in his room experimenting with different chemicals and formulas.

He is an introverted guy, which becomes a huge problem as he lives in a town where the there is a lot of gossip.

Griffin goes outside at night; however, be keeps himself completely bandaged up and wears a fake nose. The villagers think that he is very peculiar, especially because there are suddenly weird break-ins and a lot of robberies start happening in the village. But things become worse when the owner Janny Hall asks him to pay up his overture rent or leave. So, he gets depressed and frustrated, taking off all his bandages and clothes and manages to disappear into the night with his invisibility tricks.

Griffin then forces Thomas Marvel, a tramp, or migrant worker by profession, to become his assistant. But Marvel betrays him and takes him to the police, so Griffin runs away again. The Invisible Man beats them up and wreaks some major havoc while leaving.

While he is on the run again, Griffin happens to meet Dr Kemp, his old acquaintance from medical school. Griffin then tells his friend Kemp about his experiments with invisibility. He also tells him how he has made plans to terrorize England by using his discovery of invisibility. Here’s the gist of what he tells him: he was poor and was desperate to study invisibility, so he steals money from his father, who later commits suicide (it’s not revealed why he does that). Finally, Griffin gets a grip of the idea of invisibility and proceeds to do these things: (1) set his landlord’s building on fire; (2) wander around London; (3) rob a department store; and (4) wear a ridiculous outfit hired from a theatrical costume shop and go to Iping for work.

But soon Kemp realizes that Griffin has gone berserk, and hands him over to the police.

But Griffin still breaks through the police line and starts chasing Kemp into the town. But unfortunately, the locals get hold of Griffin and kill him. At the end of the story, it is revealed that Marvel has saved all the notes written by Griffin in his room at the inn, but luckily, he can’t make heads or tails out of them.

Answered by akhilesh1415ac
1

A SWER

Though Griffin was killed at the end because of his misdeeds, it is sad that such a talented died an untimely death. With him died the research he had carried on and the hope of finding a formula to make an invisible body visible again.

Marvel was the beneficiary as a result of Griffin’s death. He got not only the stolen money, but also Griffin’s note-books in which he had recorded his research formulae in cipher. He invested the money wisely in opening an inn for himself. However, the note-books were of little use to him. It would take him a lifetime to decipher Griffin’s findings. He should have returned the note-books to police as a national asset.

As far as the point of invisibility formulae hidden from Kemp is concerned, I feel Kemp should have been given Griffin’s research findings. Kemp was a man of good intentions. He could have further carried the research on making an invisible body into visible for the welfare of mankind.

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