• Frightful must it be

    This sudden elevation of language should not be merely dismissed as a facile rhetorical
    heightening for effect. What Mary Shelley seems deliberately to be doing here is evoking
    a succession of elements and emotional states associated with the Sublime in eighteenth-century
    aesthetic theory. As the Creature in his coming to life is associated with the Sublime,
    so he is its avatar wherever he appears in the novel, either living within a sublime
    landscape (e.g. Mont Blanc or northern Siberia) or terrifying the human beings whom
    he encounters by his extra-human size and countenance.