• his father

    The sense of divergent perspectives between Victor and Alphonse Frankenstein encountered
    in the first chapter (I:1:15-I:1:16) here is extended to a neighboring father's shortsighted
    thwarting of all his son's ambitions. Given Victor's portrayal of Clerval as a poet,
    it is impossible not to feel the impress of Percy Bysshe Shelley's strained relations
    with his father in this account.