• in justice, or even in possibility Questions of justice have entered this novel from various directions, spanning the
    Creature's plea for a mate (II:9:2, II:9:8) to the condemnation of Justine Moritz
    (I:7:1). What may be most interesting about Walton's invocation of the term is his
    implicit understanding of the notion of disinterested equity, a notion wholly absent
    from the closed circle of antagonism in which Victor and his Creature exist. For Mary
    Shelley to introduce such a concept this late in the novel might suggest an effort
    on her part to establish an ethical code by which readers can take the measure of
    the novel's characters and events.