468
Victor uses the same diction in thanking Walton for rescuing him: "You have benevolently
restored me to life" (I:L4:18 and note).
Victor uses the same diction in thanking Walton for rescuing him: "You have benevolently
restored me to life" (I:L4:18 and note).
Even as he honors Alphonse Frankenstein, Victor does so in terms that distance his
father into something of an icon for the principle of patriarchy itself.
As understandable as this resolve is (and, perhaps more important to the reader, as
necessary to the plot line as it may be), still Victor's silence is fundamentally
problematical on moral grounds, constituting a denial of his own responsibility and,
through an absence of candor on both private and public levels, a failure of essential
human sympathy and justice.
As with "courage," the martial virtue to which Mary Shelley here yokes "resolution,"
this word also evokes the characteristic diction of Milton's Satan. In arising to
call his forces to assemble, he marks his agenda:
how we may henceforth most offend
Our enemy, our own loss how repair,
How overcome this dire calamity,
What reinforcement we may gain from hope,
If not what resolution from despair.
-- I.187-191
When Satan ends the assembly by having his fallen legions endorse his plans to corrupt
the garden of Eden, Milton's language emphasizes the force of his resolution.
Thus saying, rose
The Monarch, and prevented all reply;
Prudent, lest from his resolution raised,
Others among the chief might offer now,
Certain to be refused, what first they feared.
-- II.466-470
Switzerland was the single self-governing democracy in Europe in the later eighteenth
century. Although England sported liberal political ideals as a factor distinguishing
the nation from the rest of Europe, in practice its long battle against the French
and Napoleon had fostered a conservative reaction in which "republican" and "jacobin"
were virtually synonymous terms of opprobrium. This was particularly the case in the
years after Waterloo when, without an external enemy by which to rally the nation
and, experiencing a severe recession as a result of its rapid and radical demobilization,
the government was fearful of any expression of political dissent and began to prosecute
broadly to suppress it. Although Victor's emphasis on his family distinction seems
a gesture toward the familiar hierarchical structures of English society, the fact
that the first sentence of the novel as it presents itself ends with so defiant, if
understated, an assertion of liberal political values indicates the presence of a
submerged political viewpoint that observant readers will be able to detect throughout
the novel. That its contemporary readers would have recognized this aspect of the
novel is indicated by how strongly politics influenced its reviews, particularly the
one that appeared in the conservative Quarterly Review.
As at the beginning of the first chapter (I:1:1), the democratic institutions of Switzerland
serve Mary Shelley as a foil to those of her own country. Especially at this time,
under the reactionary rule of its Tory government, "republican" was a pejorative term.
Mary Shelley shrewdly mitigates her affront to the current critical climate at home
by tying the term to the respectable context of Switzerland. Still, in its quiet way,
the word is an affront.
Despite his conversion to the study of modern chemistry, Victor never relinguishes
the agenda of ancient alchemy with which he began his scientific education.
Surely, the reader wonders that Victor's remorse should be at this point so limited
in its focus. Mary Shelley's exposing of his naivete seems intended to plant anticipations
of a dramatic irony, with a concomitant enlargement of the field of Victor's guilt,
yet to be revealed.
This diction may appear strange to modern ears, implying a notion of education as
constriction. Probably, however, it would not have touched a contemporary in such
a way. In Mary Shelley's day such regulation would have been construed as an adherence
to a disciplined, systematic method of education. Still, regulation must be a means
to a perceived end. In this respect, we may take the contrasting image of Victor Frankenstein—"Natural
philosophy is the genius that has regulated my fate (I:1:15)—as quietly but insistently
ironic.
This presents a stark corrective to Walton's earlier tribute to Victor's self-containment
(I:L4:28 and note).