• wishing for some mighty revolution Victor's desire for an externally applied apocalyptic solution that will break the
    logical circle he cannot escape is as characteristic of him as the passivity into
    which he actually retreats from the stress of events. Still, his figure resonates
    against his contrasting application of the turning wheel a few paragraphs earlier
    (see III:4:12 and note), where its every revolution was conceived as bringing new
    calamities upon him.

    The term "mighty revolution" cannot but retain some of its political charge in the
    context of post-Napoleonic Europe, particularly if connected to the world of undiscriminated
    wretchedness that Victor had been contemplating before Mr. Kirwin entered to prepare
    him for his father's arrival (III:4:21).