• cannot begin life anew

    Although the extent of Victor's losses must await his own narration, his despairing
    language here calls attention to itself and introduces several themes that will be
    developed in the course of the novel. One is psychic death: a person who cannot renew
    life is, in some profound sense, not truly alive, a condition made famous by Coleridge
    in the idea of "Life-in-Death" advanced in "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," line
    193. Philosophically speaking, Victor's language reflects a deterministic viewpoint.
    Readers will observe how often he invokes destiny or a like sense of fatality driving
    the course of his existence.