• the threatened fate as unavoidable Victor's constant attention to his unavoidable fate is at least partly to be construed,
    at this point in the discourse, as a justification for the blindness with which he
    worried so exclusively about himself, leaving Elizabeth unprotected. But it falls
    in line as well with his reiterated invocation of destiny during this narration to
    Walton, a rhetorical ploy by which, whether or not it is his explicit intention, he
    exonerates himself of acknowledged responsiblity for the events his actions produce.