• extraordinary merits

    The addition of such powerfully honorific diction is clearly meant to strengthen the
    reader's impression of Victor Frankenstein leading into his assumption of the novel's
    narrative. In 1818 the effect of Walton's enthusiasm was to make him appear rather
    credulous, easily taken in by Victor's cultivated manner. The reader, of course, whatever
    the inflations of vocabulary in which Walton indulges, may yet think the same of him
    in the 1831 version.