• nervous fever, which confined me for several months

    The major symptom of a nervous fever in the eighteenth century is a total want of
    strength. Thus, Victor's confinement to his bed in an invalid state for months would
    not necessarily have seemed extreme to a contemporary reader. Still, by any measure
    his appears to be no ordinary illness. Since medical terminology has changed radically
    since the novel was written, it is not easy to transpose Victor's disorder into a
    modern equivalent. Certainly, it would seem to originate in what is now called a nervous
    breakdown: Victor's past record of constant fevers and what appear to be anorexic
    symptoms suggest a systemic collapse of some magnitude.