• My letter was calm and affectionate A less calming letter could scarcely have been written to a fiancée who had not heard
    from her lover for the better part of two years. Perhaps, Mary Shelley writes with
    her tongue in her cheek, wishing to stress the strange air of unreality that has become
    habitual by now with Victor. His idea of "perfect confidence," after all, is to let
    on that he has a "dreadful" secret and then to require that Elizabeth not ask him
    a word about it. The irony is lost on him, though one assumes not on the reader. Unfortunately
    for Elizabeth, she, indeed, never questions him about his odd revelation.