• wild and enthusiastic imagination This encomium to Henry Clerval touches virtually all the thematic stops invoked by
    the novel in its representation of an ideal character, with terms already enveloped
    with multiple associations. Although any single one in excess might reveal a flaw
    productive of personal and social difficulties, in Clerval they reside in a perfect
    dynamic and dialectical balance. Where earlier critics associate Clerval with Percy
    Bysshe Shelley, this passage would be taken as a loving tribute to him.