• revenge

    With characteristic understatement, Mary Shelley places the two cousins in total contrast:
    Elizabeth through her sympathy attempting to assuage the pain Victor feels, and Victor
    consumed by his hatred. As the reader would anticipate, it is Elizabeth who makes
    the social gesture, "taking [Victor's] hand," and Victor who retreats into self-accusation.
    As a tableau vivant this is a very illuminating scene.