• but half made up

    Given the erudition of her father and her husband, Mary Shelley would have known of
    Aristophanes' account, in Plato's Symposium, of the origin of love occuring when primitive
    man was split in two: thereafter one half was always yearning for the completion of
    the self in the other. (P. B. Shelley was to translate the Symposium in the spring
    of 1818.) Here she plays against the myth ironically, for, as we will see in the sequel,
    Victor Frankenstein and his Creature will pursue a course of adversarial antagonism
    that is as passionately intense as love. It is frequently figured in the imagery of
    doubling and mirroring.