About this Edition
This edition was first designed and marked up in XHTML 1.0 Transitional and CSS by Joseph Byrne at the University of Maryland. Additional markup assistance was contributed by Lisa Marie Rhody, David Rettenmaier, and Mike Quilligan. Finally, in 2009, David, Mike, and Laura Mandell TEI-encoded the edition for the sake of preserving it and making it accessible through NINES. The present design features a detail from Tabulae sceleti et musculorum corporis humani (1747) by Bernhard Siegfried Albinus and engraved by Jan Wandelaar.
1433
to remember the actual chronology of the novel. Victor is yet only 24 years old.
1432
to remind us of the circumstances in which this story is being told. As was the case
in those instances Victor signals a new intensification in the circumstances of the
plot, with Henry Clerval reentering the novel.
1431
to transfer their center of activity to Oxford. Elizabeth must be referring to the
despondent period the summer earlier, following Victor's confrontation by the Creature
beneath Mont Blanc.
1430
will acknowledge it so three paragraphs later. Still, we have to recognize that we
have come full circle: Walton addresses the Creature with the appellation employed
by Victor Frankenstein immediately after his creation (I:4:2 and note) and again upon
reencountering him on the Mer-de-Glace of Mont Blanc (II:2:5 and note). Two sentences
later he will reiterate Victor's linguistic leap into transcendental terminology,
demonizing the Creature as a fiend. In his response the Creature picks up on the shift
in signification, comparing himself both to Adam and to Satan.
1429
the Creature that Victor's resort to it is perhaps only to be expected.
1428
which contrasts ironically with the passionate need for community that drives the
Creature and that has just been denied him, it would appear, forever.
1427
progress in that direction. By the time the Rhine reaches Cologne it has broadened
considerably, abating the strong current it bears through the mountainous country
further south.
1426
Percy Shelley had been living in Windsor when he first met Mary, and it was to that
region that they moved in 1817 to set up their household in Marlow. There Mary Shelley
wrote the principal part of this novel. It is clear that in retrospect Windsor held
a special place in Mary Shelley's memories: it is the site, for instance, in which
she bases the early chapters of The Last Man (1826), with their idealized portraits
of herself and Percy Bysshe Shelley.