• mine—mine to protect, love, and cherish

    How well Victor Frankenstein fulfills what he considers his obligation by Elizabeth
    will unfold in the sequel. To some extent Mary Shelley is playing to a sentimental
    conception of elective affinity in this portrayal, and certainly she is attempting
    from the start to strengthen the romantic attachment Victor feels for Elizabeth. At
    the same time, the extreme possessiveness of Victor's attitude is a characteristic
    from which, in her personal life, she would have recoiled; and it is therefore no
    unusual stretching of the rhetoric that would lead a reader to see in Victor's sense
    of duty an implicitly demeaning condescension that reinforces an inherently masculinist
    notion of power.