• the lessons . . . sanguinary laws of man

    The Creature means that the story of Felix's efforts on behalf of Safie's father and
    the ruination suffered by the De Laceys as a result have taught him how to manipulate
    the judicial system. Thus, his framing of Justine Moritz is deliberate. There is a
    further sense in which he has also framed the magistrate Alphonse Frankenstein to
    become complicitous in a grave injustice, but that solid upright citizen is never
    aware of it.

    A particularly brutal aspect of the "sanguinary laws of man" that the Creature did
    not learn from Felix but has discovered on his own is how to victimize women. In the
    1831 text (II:16:35) Mary Shelley stresses that Justine is framed because she represents
    the type of Safie who fled in fear from his presence. In the revised text, then, the
    planting of the picture is a symbolic form of rape.