590

  • whose hands seem only made to dabble in dirt

    The phrase suggests the powders used in chemical analysis. Victor will be so converted
    to modern scientific research as to lose his earlier aversion to such mundane and
    messy experimentation. What he later calls his "workshop of filthy creation" (I:3:9
    and note) seems to reflect this diction.

  • 589

  • what interest and sympathy

    That this is secondarily a puff for the narrative that follows, openly charging us
    as readers to respond to it with interest and sympathy, should not detract from its
    main function, which is to return us to the opening sentence of the paragraph before
    and its honoring of the essential human link inherent to fellow-feeling. That Walton's
    sympathy for Victor Frankenstein should extend to the reader's sympathetic reaction
    to them both is a fundamental tenet of Mary Shelley's notion of the value of, the
    purpose for, writing.

  • 588

  • it proved a wet, uncongenial summer

    1816 is famous as "the summer that never was." A remarkable worldwide climatic disturbance
    was caused by the eruption of Mt. Tambora in Indonesia the previous winter, which
    filled the high atmosphere with a fine ash that limited solar penetration.

  • 587

  • wealth

    In order to place Walton's expedition in an objective perspective, the reader should
    reflect on what it would cost for a private individual to organize and pay the complete
    costs of an enterprise that in Mary Shelley's day was assumed by the British state
    and, because of its not inconsiderable expense, was the subject of careful and even
    suspicious scrutiny.

  • 586

  • I was destined

    This phrase is accentuated by being repeated in adjoining sentences. Yet, for all
    its unusual emphasis, the phrase dissipates its power, as the passive voice once again
    deflects any sense of responsibility from Victor: see I:3:3 and note.

  • 585

  • It was to be decided

    Victor's characteristic passive verb construction reasserts itself here, in circumstances
    where, since he has been out of the country for so long, he is the only member of
    his family without an understood obligation to the court. The passive mood does suggest
    his sense that he is trapped without a means of exonerating a person he is certain
    is innocent. At the same time, in being attached to his own withdrawal from family
    obligations, it may also indicate a more complicated pattern of causality than Victor
    might like to believe in, one in which from the first he bears responsibility.

  • 584

  • Waldman

    It has been suggested that Mary Shelley models Waldman on Percy Bysshe Shelley's instructor
    in science at Eton, James Lind, who was also physician to George III at Windsor Castle.
    He is portrayed by Shelley as Laon's protector and teacher in the contemporary Revolt
    of Islam, Canto III.

  • 583

  • M. Waldman

    Pronounced Valt-mahn.

  • 582

  • all the voyages made for purposes of discovery

    Accounts of explorers were frequently bound together and sold as sets. From Hakluyt's
    Voyages (1589) until well into the nineteenth century these were a common genre of
    publishing.

  • 581

  • the voice of command

    Although the emphasis here is on a Godwinian model of education, the implicit equality
    and shared sense of responsibility carry political connotations as well. This is particularly
    so within the democratic environment provided by Switzerland.