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of destruction. Yet, the forceful egotism by which Victor empowers himself, justifying
his actions as divinely decreed, also suggests what today we would call a megalomania.
The term "mighty revolution" cannot but retain some of its political charge in the
context of post-Napoleonic Europe, particularly if connected to the world of undiscriminated
wretchedness that Victor had been contemplating before Mr. Kirwin entered to prepare
him for his father's arrival (III:4:21).
Although, of course, Victor will need to pursue his scientific labors by himself,
the verb "coveted" conveys a sense of profound asociality as a crucial aspect of Victor's
constitution. However eagerly he expresses his anticipation of returning to find fulfillment
in his union with Elizabeth, what his father praises as "our domestic calm" at this
point in the 1818 edition seems wholly to lack the capacity to satisfy Victor.