273
The double entendre falls heavily, since from this point on until the end of his life
Victor will be tied to his Creature with unbreakable bonds
The double entendre falls heavily, since from this point on until the end of his life
Victor will be tied to his Creature with unbreakable bonds
Here in an essential form is the crux of the similarity being subtly drawn between
the conditions of Justine and the Creature. Not only has society cast her off as "guilty,"
but it has reinforced its verdict by classifying her as alien, beyond a human pale:
thus, a "monster." Yet, since individual identity is itself so deeply subject to social
construction, to find oneself termed alien is to undergo an immediate process of self-alienation.
We will witness the same process as the driving force in the Creature's education
as the next volume unfolds.
A long critical history has sprung up around this statement. Now that all the extant
manuscripts for the novel have been published in facsimile, it would appear, at least
from the written evidence, that Mary Shelley's defence of her own artistry is accurate.
Her husband read the manuscript with careful attention, here and there suggesting
variations in phrasing that Mary Shelley incorporated into the final form of the novel.
As the editor of the facsimile edition concludes, "A reading of the evidence in these
Frankenstein Notebooks should make clear that PBS's contributions to Frankenstein
were no more than what most publishers' editors have provided new (or old) authors
or, in fact, what colleagues have provided to each other after reading each other's
works in progress." For the full statement, see Charles E. Robinson, ed. The Frankenstein
Notebooks: A Facsimile Edition (New York and London: Garland Publishing, 1996), I,
lxvii-lxx.
Although the first sentence of the preface to the original edition, which points to
Erasmus Darwin, has generally been thought to specify his Temple of Nature, Victor
Frankenstein's scientific concern with animal structures might suggest the relevance
to the novel as well of Darwin's Zoonomia; or, the Laws of Organic Life, published
in two volumes in 1794 and 1796. The first volume, in particular, broadly considers
the function of structure throughout the faunal species.
Human benevolence, or natural goodness (the quality stressed in the revised language
of the third edition), is an attribute believed in deeply by both Mary and Percy Bysshe
Shelley. At the same time, it cannot simply be assumed as a given in Frankenstein,
for it is severely tested by the chain of events driving this novel. Even people who
are nominally benevolent (Victor is the obvious example), act with questionable ethics.
And those who are most committed to the notion of a natural benevolence (Elizabeth,
for instance) would be hard pressed to show any evidence for it.
Sentimental as are Justine's remarks, it is important to realize how scrupulously
they register such major themes of the novel as the value of domestic affections and
of sympathy. Whether they do so to underscore the consolation they offer when all
else fails or their inadequacy to assuage a fundamental injustice is the question
Mary Shelley carefully leaves up in the air.
Seemingly a proverbial expression, this phrase bears a strong resemblance to the Archangel
Raphael's injunction to Adam at the conclusion of his survey of God's newly created
universe:
Solicit not thy thoughts with matters hid;
Leave them to God above; him serve, and fear!
Of other creatures, as him pleases best,
Wherever placed, let him dispose; joy thou
In what he gives to thee, this Paradise
And thy fair Eve; Heaven is for thee too high
To know what passes there; be lowly wise:
Think only what concerns thee, and thy being;
Dream not of other worlds, what creatures there
Live, in what state, condition, or degree;
Contented that thus far hath been revealed
Not of Earth only, but of highest Heaven.
-- Paradise Lost, VIII.167-178
Throughout the novel, with the exception of Victor's interview with his Creature in
Volume 2 (II:2:6), only the blind (II:7:16) or one who dissembles their condition
(III:WC:35) can remain unperturbed in the presence of the Creature.
The sense of divergent perspectives between Victor and Alphonse Frankenstein encountered
in the first chapter (I:1:15-I:1:16) here is extended to a neighboring father's shortsighted
thwarting of all his son's ambitions. Given Victor's portrayal of Clerval as a poet,
it is impossible not to feel the impress of Percy Bysshe Shelley's strained relations
with his father in this account.
The pronoun is pointed, an attempt to shield Mary Shelley from an attack on her as
a female novelist. Attenuating this strategy, Percy Bysshe Shelley himself undertook
all negotiations for the publication of the novel. The subterfuge worked at least
to some extent. Walter Scott, reviewing the novel in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine
identified Shelley as the author. Closer to the local scene, the Quarterly, inimical
to Godwin, savaged the novel as the production of his daughter. Perhaps, this was
exactly why the subterfuge was undertaken in the first place.