• to undertake a voyage of discovery to the land of knowledge

    Although Clerval seems lighthearted in his exaggeration, his phrasing resonates with
    startling irony. Not only does it play against Victor's obsession with acquiring knowledge
    at any cost, only just now having attained its fateful consequence, but the diction,
    so like the language of Walton's first letter (I:L1:2), reminds us that Walton himself
    would not be an auditor of Victor Frankenstein's life story had not both of them been
    in peril of their lives in the Arctic wilderness.