• they had called me mad Just nine months before Elizabeth's death Victor, after the discovery of Clerval's
    corpse, had fallen into a delirium lasting two months (III:4:11). Even, after he had
    regained his reason, his ranting convinced his father that he remained truly deranged
    (III:5:5). The constant threading of this issue through the novel must remind Mary
    Shelley's readers that they are wholly at the mercy of this autobiographical narrative
    embedded in her text, a narrative told by a man introduced as "generally having an
    expression of wildness, even madness" to him (I:L4:10). It is more than possible that
    this is exactly her point, that Victor has been slowly descending into a madness from
    which there is no escape, and that with his descent the narrative becomes increasingly
    unreliable.