CHAPTER XVIII

Chapter 212,846 wordsCompleted

Victor spends weeks in Geneva unable to resume his work on the promised female companion. His health recovers, yet he is torn between revulsion for the task and the looming threat of the Creature. Beaufort, pleased with Victor’s improvement, presses him to marry Elizabeth immediately, arguing their lifelong bond would bring domestic comfort. Victor, bound by his solemn promise, sees marriage as impossible and fears breaking it will doom his family. He resolves to travel to England to seek the latest scientific discoveries required for the creation, disguising this purpose as a scholarly visit. Beaufort, unaware of the true motive, arranges for Henry Clerval to join Victor in Strasbourg, hoping companionship will aid his son’s recovery. Victor departs Geneva in late September, leaving Elizabeth in a tearful farewell. He and Clerval travel down the Rhine, observing castles, vineyards, and ruined fortifications; Clerval is exuberant, describing the landscape as a “fairy‑land,” while Victor remains consumed by gloom and the Creature’s menace. After two days in Strasbourg they continue the river to Rotterdam, then board a ship for England. Their sea voyage brings them past the white cliffs of Britain, the Thames, and historic sites such as Tilbury Fort, Gravesend, Woolwich, and Greenwich, culminating in the sight of London’s skyline with St Paul’s and the Tower. Throughout the journey Victor oscillates between fleeting moments of peace and pervasive dread that the Creature will follow or that his loathsome work will be discovered. He clings to the hope that creating a female companion will rid him of the Creature’s tyranny and allow his union with Elizabeth. The chapter concludes with Victor and Clerval arriving in England, poised to acquire the knowledge needed for the female creation.