English, asked by gagan0122, 1 year ago

Why they killed dr Kemp in the novel

Answers

Answered by MohammedRahil
0
Dr. Kemp and
Griffin were two diametrically opposite characters. Though scientists by
profession, morally, ethically they were poles apart.

Griffin was
a man who had no conscience, was callous towards other people and simply
self-centered. He appeared to be at war with the entire mankind. All his
actions stemmed from his desire to save himself, with not a thought of care and
sympathy for others. He did many mean acts in the novel. When he was short of
money he continued his experiments, without any thoughts of the consequences,
he robed his own father, who committed suicide because the money was not his.
He attended his father’s funeral without feeling sorry for his own act; instead
he blamed his father for being a sentimental fool. He experimented on a cat,
with no concern for the poor creature’s cries of pain. He threw it out and
never tried to find whether it was alive or dead. He burnt down the house at
Great Portland Street when the landlord and his sons found about his
experiments and were horrified. He was only worried about covering his trail.

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Answered by abhay683
0
Griffin was a man who was conscience
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