• Latin . . . Greek . . . English . . . German

    These languages are considerable accomplishments for an adolescent, though both Percy
    Bysshe Shelley and William Godwin could assert similar claims. More important, with
    the exception of German, by this time in her life so could Mary Shelley. Within the
    fictional ambience itself, the reader can imagine how rekindled, in listening to this
    account, would have been Walton's retrospective guilt over his undereducated, undirected
    adolescence (I:L2:2).