• excitements to his vengeance Walton is referring to Victor's own acute sense that the spirit world that guides
    him is vindictive (III:7:19) and exonerates him from normal codes of worldly justice
    or, indeed, responsibility for his acts as a member of society. Yet, the emphasis
    here on "his vengeance" suggests that Walton's apprehension is crucially different
    from Victor's own and serves to underscore the delusional, paranoid mentality that
    is now Victor's habitual mode of thought.