• so vicious and base

    The Creature's education in and through the simultaneity of contraries (see II:3:6
    and note) leads him to a large political and social realm that is difficult for him
    to assess. He is hardly the first to have such a reaction. This sentence resonates
    with the same sense of frustration with the contradictions of the human condition
    expressed by Byron's Manfred (Manfred was begun in the summer of 1816) in a similar
    Alpine setting to that in which the Creature speaks.

              Beautiful!
    How beautiful is all this visible world!
    How glorious in its action and itself;
    But we, who name ourselves its sovereigns, we,
    Half deity, half dust, alike unfit
    To sink or soar, with our mix'd essence make
    A conflict of its elements, and breathe
    The breath of degradation and of pride,
    Contending with low wants and lofty will
    Till our mortality predominates,
    And men are—what they name not to themselves,
    And trust not to each other.
    —I.ii.36-47