This is the second close male friendship in as many lines (see the note to "friend").
                     Since friendships reflect character in this novel, the intimacy Alphonse Frankenstein
                     feels for Beaufort (I:1:2) and the elder Clerval (I:2:5), both of whom share a sternness
                     of resolve and a narrow preoccupation with business success, may suggest a comparable
                     rigidity, or at least a stiffness and lack of flexibility, in Victor's father. Victor
                     will himself shortly note these traits in respect to how his father oversees his development
                     (I:1:16).