The Delacy home sets the scene for the creature’s interaction with humanity, and the world as a whole, as well as offer an aspirational ideal for how humanity ‘should’ look. Through them, the creature, and the audience by extension, is given a view of the world that has been very different from the cold, inhuman, and ‘rational’ realm of Doctor Frankenstein. The Delacy family imbues a world of compassion to each other and themselves, with each member of the family striving to assist the other, despite their material poverty.
It is in these woods to that the creature was first educated. Though since demonstrating himself capable of classical rhetoric, and in possession of extraordinary intellectual ability, the creature's mind was developed in the same way as its body- from the discarded husks of humanity. As his creator scavenged through graveyards for worthy corpses, the creature built his intellectual base off of old books, so irrelevant to have been left in a forest sack. And, much like his contiguous parts meant nothing to the being he became, the creature’s patchwork consciousness is a creation entirely of his own.
Though the creature desires to integrate himself into this ideal family, it is not they but the biblical Adam that he relates to the most. Both are castaways derived from an indifferent god, and pioneers into a world that never knew of them, this alignment poses an intriguing implication: the creature expects himself to be the first of many, or at least the intention to begat himself upon the world. By positioning himself as an aspirant towards this goal, the creature has acknowledged his desires for companionship on his level.