• yet another may succeed Victor's complete self-contradiction in his last moments mirrors the novel's ambivalence
    over the conflicting claims of domestic retreat and aspiring self-assertion, which
    are in turn poles that themselves comprise a dialectical field over which Romanticism
    continually expresses much ambivalence. The particular terms of Victor's last utterance
    have a somewhat chilling effect: at what, a reader may well wonder, does Victor contemplate
    another's success? If in the realm in which he has failed, assuming the role of God,
    we may envision from Victor's experience a greater, even a catastrophic, failure.
    Even as he moves linguistically to open up possibility, the lingering effects of his
    example resist his optimism.