• to utter sounds

    Only at this point, at the end of the chapter, do we become aware that the Creature
    has, up to now, no ability to relate linguistically, that he is still operating on
    the non-verbal level of the sparrows and thrushes whose sounds he first discriminated
    (paragraph 4 above). Although presumably the De Lacey family speaks during the ongoing
    business of the day, except for the "few sounds" (paragraph 14 above) that were uttered
    by the young man outside the cottage and by the old man when his music elicited tears,
    this account is, as it were, rendered against a backdrop of total silence except for
    the interlude of music. Mary Shelley's artistic refinement in rendering this silence
    intensifies, in contrast, the importance of words and of communication for the world
    of her novel.