• it modelled my feelings Whether impelled by the verb "modelled" (1818) or "moulded" (1831), this is a fascinating
    phrase. In the second case, although the revised edition lacks the epigraph from Milton's
    Paradise Lost that marks the original title page ("Did I request thee, Maker, from
    my clay / To mould me Man?"—X.743-44 ), Mary Shelley's recast diction seems to recall
    it with a deliberate irony. In this reconstitution the new Adam, lacking all free
    will, is animated by his own revenge, which is the pattern, the "mould," established
    by Satan in Milton's epic.

    On a mundane rather than cosmic level, however, we might want to contemplate what
    it is to have one's entire emotional life formed by the sentiment of revenge? In accord
    with the loss of "voluntary thought" mentioned in the previous sentence, Victor also
    gives up any feeling, any instinctual sense of identification, that might lead him
    away from his obsessive rage against his double. He thus confesses himself as being
    wholly shaped, both intellectually and emotionally, by this bond of negation. As he
    embarks on a pursuit of high adventure, he casts himself, ironically, as a totally
    passive victim of his own choosing.