• I wept like a child

    Victor's account of himself in these paragraphs testifies to a person on the brink
    of becoming unhinged—almost paralyzed, needing two days at Lausanne to recover a sense
    of purpose, invoking his native landscape in effusive tears. Such immature behavior
    could be a sign of the fears he has repressed for a year and a half, and certainly
    for the reader their emotional heightening portends some new disaster about to reveal
    itself. At the same time, if we wish to assume that this is a novel with pretensions
    to being realistic, and not merely gothic in its representation, we might wish here
    to turn our attention from the ominous to the psychological. These are all symptoms
    of a personality that has barely survived its breakdown. The year of convalesence
    has offered tranquillity, but does not appear to have altered the essential trauma
    Victor has suffered in the Creature's birth. Throughout the rest of the novel, Mary
    Shelley adroitly poises her protagonist on the edge of madness, and the readers of
    his behavior (a class that should include Walton as well as us) can never be quite
    sure on what side of the line he stands.