504

  • sleeps with his angel mother

    The saccharine evocation of Caroline Frankenstein may be meant to offset the radical
    import of this phrase: there is no mention at all of heaven here.

  • 503

  • slaughter-house

    To facilitate his creation Victor has recourse to animal parts and tissues from the
    abattoir. What Victor thus rightly distinguishes in the previous paragraph as his
    "new species" would seem to be an amalgam of several orders of sentient life. The
    Creature's mixed status perhaps explains his superhuman strength, also the curious
    fact that—like the herbivore cattle and horses to whom he may be physically indebted—he
    is a vegetarian.

  • 502

  • simpler organization

    That is, of a less highly developed genus. The language reflects the late-eighteenth
    century fascination with hierarchical taxonomies in all the sciences (see also I:2:16
    and note).

  • 501

  • silent as a Turk

    In the early nineteenth century Turkey was the center of the far-flung Ottoman Empire,
    which was to an English readership noteworthy for its autocracy and corruption. Perhaps
    more to the point in 1831, that Empire abutted the growing British presence in India
    and Afghanistan, making it a natural object of suspicion and prejudice. Whether Mary
    Shelley thought twice about the terms of her analogy here one cannot know, but it
    is a fact that Turks do not fare well in this novel. In its second volume (II:6:12)
    Safie's father acts an ungenerous and even treacherous role.

  • 500

  • shunned

    Mary Shelley's brief addition in 1831 emphasizes the extremity of psychological state
    that lies behind Victor's critical physical debility. He is at once paranoid, profoundly
    introverted, and vaguely guilt-stricken. In modern parlance his condition would be
    described as psychotic.

  • 499

  • a short tale

    This length would have been commensurate with the suggestive but unfinished "Fragment"
    that Byron contributed to the writing contest, or with the longer piece, essentially
    a short story, that John Polidori entitled The Vampyre; a Tale.

  • 498

  • she whom we saw every day

    In the early months after Mary Godwin and Percy Bysshe Shelley returned to England
    they were both afflicted with the deaths of women with whom their lives were closely
    interknit. On 9 October 1816 Fanny Godwin, Mary's half-sister, committed suicide.
    A month later Harriet Shelley, P. B. Shelley's legal wife, drowned herself in the
    Serpentine River in Hyde Park. Those experiences would appear to be registered in
    this elegiac paragraph.

  • 497

  • she was induced to give her an education

    In a novel so concerned with education this emphasis on Justine's advancement testifies
    to Mary Shelley's belief in its universal value. This is of a piece with the arguments
    of her father William Godwin in Political Justice (1793) and reflects as well the
    strong democratic sentiments that Mary Shelley shared with her husband. It is important
    to remember that, under her father's tutelege, Mary Godwin enjoyed an education that
    in her day was equalled by only a handful of young women in England.

  • 496

  • She nursed Madame Frankenstein

    As in the account she gave Victor in the letter of March of the previous spring (I:5:5),
    Elizabeth accentuates Justine's ministrations.

  • 495

  • She died on the first approach of cold weather

    Justine is orphaned pointedly about the same time (the previous November) that Victor
    Frankenstein gives life to his Creature, who is, like Justine, an unwanted dependant.
    Unlike every other character in the novel, however, the Creature is cut adrift from
    family protection not by death, but by a lack of human responsibility for his nurture.
    Born in abnormal circumstances, he is without family, wholly unaccommodated in an
    alien world. Where Alphonse Frankenstein virtually adopts Justine, his son rejects
    the Creature he has fashioned.