• unbridled joy and hilarity

    Surely, Victor, like any human being, has a right to pursue happiness. But it is the
    case, that, beginning here, on every occasion when he anticipates a return to normal
    human pleasures he experiences instead a disastrous reversal of expectations. From
    this moment on his joy will never again be "unbridled," but rather, at best, what
    Thomas Gray, in his "Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College," called "fearful."

    Some bold adventurers disdain
    The limits of their little reign,
    And unknown regions dare descry:
    Still as they run they look behind,
    And hear a voice in every wind,
    And snatch a fearful joy. (lines 35-40)