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sharply with the strength of his verb emphasizing sheer brutality. This language is
commensurate with the burst of passionate violence in which he tore to pieces the
second being on whom he had labored (III:3:4).
The oddly cavalier attitude toward grave matters pronounced just before in Victor's
interview with his father (III:1:8) appears to deepen here.
No one, not even his father, ever speaks to Victor so forthrightly or with such categorical
moral language. The diction picks up on the issue of what is a "right" from two paragraphs
before.
Alphonse Frankenstein has so chastized Victor over his slippery sense of his family
obligations that he ought to experience some confusion to hear his father's words
echoed from the mouth of his Creature. In a world about to be turned upside-down,
it would not be surprising if Victor's putative son were not in some odd sense to
assume the role of his father.