His body remains invisible; the objects he wears reveal its outline.
After entering a London shop for warmth, Griffin dressed himself in shoes, an overcoat and a wide-brimmed hat. He also ate cold meat and drank coffee. The clothing around his invisible body made him appear as a visible, if oddly covered, person.
His lawless revenge creates his own dangerous homelessness.
Griffin had set fire to his landlord’s house in revenge and removed his clothes to escape unseen. This left him homeless, naked and invisible in cold London, so he wandered the streets seeking shelter.
His concealed appearance and antisocial manner make him seem eccentric rather than immediately supernatural.
He arrives at the Iping inn in winter with his face covered, demands solitude, refuses conversation and reacts irritably to friendly attention. Mrs Hall excuses these strange habits because he says an accident has affected his face and pays in advance.
The apparent empty-room theft is explained by Griffin’s invisibility.
A clergyman and his wife hear money being taken from the desk in their study. When they enter, the room appears empty, yet the desk has been opened and the housekeeping money is gone. The invisible Griffin has committed the burglary.
Each event is caused by the invisible Griffin, though the villagers first blame spirits or witchcraft.
Mrs Hall and her husband find Griffin’s room apparently empty although his clothes and bandages remain. A hat flies into Mrs Hall’s face, a chair charges at the couple and seems to push them out and lock the door. Later Griffin removes his disguise before the villagers, becoming a headless and then fully invisible man, and fights off Constable Jaffers.
The answer assembles the chapter’s repeated violations of property, safety and law.
Griffin repeatedly uses his scientific discovery without moral restraint. He burns his landlord’s house in revenge, steals clothes and food from the London store, attacks a shopkeeper, robs a clergyman’s desk, frightens Mrs Hall and resists lawful arrest by striking people who cannot see him. These are not isolated acts of survival: anger, theft and violence become his usual methods. His invisibility gives him power without accountability, and he chooses to exploit it. The description ‘lawless’ is therefore fully justified.
The assessment contrasts the scale of his discovery with his destructive use of it.
Griffin is scientifically brilliant but ethically irresponsible. Through sustained experiments he discovers how to make the human body transparent, an extraordinary achievement. Yet the chapter shows no concern in him for testing safely, helping society or accepting responsibility for consequences. He applies the discovery to conceal crime and violence, and his impulsiveness leaves him cold, homeless and hunted. He demonstrates that technical intelligence alone does not make a good scientist; scientific ability must be joined to self-control and moral judgment.