To disobey such an injunction, with its almost institutionalized cultural sanction,
                     is to commit a transgression of substance, preparing us for other instances of conflicting
                     goals between son and father—Victor and Alphonse Frankenstein, Felix De Lacey and
                     his blind father—on other narrative levels of the novel, as well as other, much greater
                     transgressions for the sake of knowledge. The fact that Walton is orphaned at a young
                     age introduces yet another common theme of the novel.