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of false consciousness, as Victor charges himself with a solemn revenge for murders
of human beings yet supports his mission by killing other sentient creatures. Readers
will recall that, in contrast, the Creature is a strict vegetarian.
The idea here is that Victor would travel northeast to Basel on the confines of Switzerland,
thence follow the Rhine to Strasbourg, where he would be met by Clerval who, suspending
his course of studies at the University of Ingolstadt, would have travelled west across
Germany to join him. The two would then proceed north by boat through Germany into
Holland where the Rhine empties into the North Sea just beyond Rotterdam. This is
essentially the return route followed by Mary Godwin and Percy Shelley in their 1814
excursion memorialized in A History of a Six Weeks' Tour.
In the eighteenth century the dome of St. Paul's Cathedral, after St. Peter's in Rome
the largest structure in the world, dominated the London cityscape.
Coming up the Thames, these late eighteenth-century travellers remark the objects
that rise above the cityscape, which in general would have otherwise been limited
to perhaps five or six storeys in height. In these circumstances the steeples of the
London churches would have called attention to themselves, as they include many architectural
masterpieces.
A coastal city in Fife, St. Andrew's is the site of the oldest university in Scotland,
founded in 1411. However impatient Victor represents himself, he and Henry Clerval
go well out of their way to visit medieval sites on their way to Perth.