• friendship As with other aspects of Clerval, his capacity for "devoted," which is to say, perfectly
    disinterested, friendship separates him as an ideal, both for Victor (who from his
    student days has been too self-absorbed for such friendship) and for Walton, whose
    desire for such a friend, articulated in his second letter (I:L2:1) and in his growing
    attachment(I:L4:21) to Victor, first introduced this theme as central to the structure
    of Mary Shelley's novel.