Answer:
Edmond Dantès
Before his imprisonment, Edmond Dantès is a kind, innocent, honest, and loving man. Though naturally intelligent, he is a man of few opinions, living his life instinctively by a traditional code of ethics that impels him to honor his superiors, care dutifully for his aging father, and treat his fellow man generously.
Dantès is filled with positive feeling, admiring his boss, Monsieur Morrel; loving his father; adoring his fiancÊe, MercÊdès; and even attempting to think kindly of men who clearly dislike him. While in prison, however, Dantès undergoes a great change.
EXTRA INFORMATION:
He becomes bitter and vengeful as he obsesses over the wrongs committed against him. When his companion, AbbĂŠ Faria, dies, so too does Dantèsâs only remaining deep connection to another human being. Dantès loses the capacity to feel any emotion other than hatred for those who have harmed him and gratitude toward those who have tried to help him. He moves through the world like an outsider, disconnected from any human community and interested only in carrying out his mission as the agent of Providence. It is not until Dantès finds love again, in a relationship with HaydĂŠe, that he is able to reconnect to his own humanity and begin to live humanly again.