Frankenstein

Chapter 2

We were brought up togeth­er; there was not quite a year dif­fer­ence in our ages. I need not say that we were strangers to any species of dis­union or dis­pute. Har­mo­ny was the soul of our com­pan­ion­ship, and the diver­si­ty and con­trast that sub­sist­ed in our char­ac­ters drew us near­er togeth­er. Eliz­a­beth was of a calmer and more con­cen­trat­ed dis­po­si­tion; but, with all my ardour, I was capa­ble of a more intense appli­ca­tion and was more deeply smit­ten with the thirst for knowl­edge. She bus­ied her­self with fol­low­ing the aer­i­al cre­ations of the poets; and in the majes­tic and won­drous scenes which sur­round­ed our Swiss home —the sub­lime shapes of the moun­tains, the changes of the sea­sons, tem­pest and calm, the silence of win­ter, and the life and tur­bu­lence of our Alpine summers—she found ample scope for admi­ra­tion and delight. While my com­pan­ion con­tem­plat­ed with a seri­ous and sat­is­fied spir­it the mag­nif­i­cent appear­ances of things, I delight­ed in inves­ti­gat­ing their caus­es. The world was to me a secret which I desired to divine. Curios­i­ty, earnest research to learn the hid­den laws of nature, glad­ness akin to rap­ture, as they were unfold­ed to me, are among the ear­li­est sen­sa­tions I can remember.

On the birth of a sec­ond son, my junior by sev­en years, my par­ents gave up entire­ly their wan­der­ing life and fixed them­selves in their native coun­try. We pos­sessed a house in Gene­va, and a cam­pagne on Bel­rive, the east­ern shore of the lake, at the dis­tance of rather more than a league from the city. We resided prin­ci­pal­ly in the lat­ter, and the lives of my par­ents were passed in con­sid­er­able seclu­sion. It was my tem­per to avoid a crowd and to attach myself fer­vent­ly to a few. I was indif­fer­ent, there­fore, to my school-fel­lows in gen­er­al; but I unit­ed myself in the bonds of the clos­est friend­ship to one among them. Hen­ry Cler­val was the son of a mer­chant of Gene­va. He was a boy of sin­gu­lar tal­ent and fan­cy. He loved enter­prise, hard­ship, and even dan­ger for its own sake. He was deeply read in books of chival­ry and romance. He com­posed hero­ic songs and began to write many a tale of enchant­ment and knight­ly adven­ture. He tried to make us act plays and to enter into mas­quer­ades, in which the char­ac­ters were drawn from the heroes of Ron­ces­valles, of the Round Table of King Arthur, and the chival­rous train who shed their blood to redeem the holy sepul­chre from the hands of the infi­dels.

No human being could have passed a hap­pi­er child­hood than myself. My par­ents were pos­sessed by the very spir­it of kind­ness and indul­gence. We felt that they were not the tyrants to rule our lot accord­ing to their caprice, but the agents and cre­ators of all the many delights which we enjoyed. When I min­gled with oth­er fam­i­lies I dis­tinct­ly dis­cerned how pecu­liar­ly for­tu­nate my lot was, and grat­i­tude assist­ed the devel­op­ment of fil­ial love.

My tem­per was some­times vio­lent, and my pas­sions vehe­ment; but by some law in my tem­per­a­ture they were turned not towards child­ish pur­suits but to an eager desire to learn, and not to learn all things indis­crim­i­nate­ly. I con­fess that nei­ther the struc­ture of lan­guages, nor the code of gov­ern­ments, nor the pol­i­tics of var­i­ous states pos­sessed attrac­tions for me. It was the secrets of heav­en and earth that I desired to learn; and whether it was the out­ward sub­stance of things or the inner spir­it of nature and the mys­te­ri­ous soul of man that occu­pied me, still my inquiries were direct­ed to the meta­phys­i­cal, or in its high­est sense, the phys­i­cal secrets of the world.

Mean­while Cler­val occu­pied him­self, so to speak, with the moral rela­tions of things. The busy stage of life, the virtues of heroes, and the actions of men were his theme; and his hope and his dream was to become one among those whose names are record­ed in sto­ry as the gal­lant and adven­tur­ous bene­fac­tors of our species. The saint­ly soul of Eliz­a­beth shone like a shrine-ded­i­cat­ed lamp in our peace­ful home. Her sym­pa­thy was ours; her smile, her soft voice, the sweet glance of her celes­tial eyes, were ever there to bless and ani­mate us. She was the liv­ing spir­it of love to soft­en and attract; I might have become sullen in my study, rough through the ardour of my nature, but that she was there to sub­due me to a sem­blance of her own gen­tle­ness. And Clerval—could aught ill entrench on the noble spir­it of Cler­val? Yet he might not have been so per­fect­ly humane, so thought­ful in his gen­eros­i­ty, so full of kind­ness and ten­der­ness amidst his pas­sion for adven­tur­ous exploit, had she not unfold­ed to him the real love­li­ness of benef­i­cence and made the doing good the end and aim of his soar­ing ambition.

I feel exquis­ite plea­sure in dwelling on the rec­ol­lec­tions of child­hood, before mis­for­tune had taint­ed my mind and changed its bright visions of exten­sive use­ful­ness into gloomy and nar­row reflec­tions upon self. Besides, in draw­ing the pic­ture of my ear­ly days, I also record those events which led, by insen­si­ble steps, to my after tale of mis­ery, for when I would account to myself for the birth of that pas­sion which after­wards ruled my des­tiny I find it arise, like a moun­tain riv­er, from igno­ble and almost for­got­ten sources; but, swelling as it pro­ceed­ed, it became the tor­rent which, in its course, has swept away all my hopes and joys.

Nat­ur­al phi­los­o­phy is the genius that has reg­u­lat­ed my fate; I desire, there­fore, in this nar­ra­tion, to state those facts which led to my predilec­tion for that sci­ence. When I was thir­teen years of age we all went on a par­ty of plea­sure to the baths near Thonon; the inclemen­cy of the weath­er oblig­ed us to remain a day con­fined to the inn. In this house I chanced to find a vol­ume of the works of Cor­nelius Agrip­pa. I opened it with apa­thy; the the­o­ry which he attempts to demon­strate and the won­der­ful facts which he relates soon changed this feel­ing into enthu­si­asm. A new light seemed to dawn upon my mind, and bound­ing with joy, I com­mu­ni­cat­ed my dis­cov­ery to my father. My father looked care­less­ly at the title page of my book and said, “Ah! Cor­nelius Agrip­pa! My dear Vic­tor, do not waste your time upon this; it is sad trash.”

If, instead of this remark, my father had tak­en the pains to explain to me that the prin­ci­ples of Agrip­pa had been entire­ly explod­ed and that a mod­ern sys­tem of sci­ence had been intro­duced which pos­sessed much greater pow­ers than the ancient, because the pow­ers of the lat­ter were chimeri­cal, while those of the for­mer were real and prac­ti­cal, under such cir­cum­stances I should cer­tain­ly have thrown Agrip­pa aside and have con­tent­ed my imag­i­na­tion, warmed as it was, by return­ing with greater ardour to my for­mer stud­ies. It is even pos­si­ble that the train of my ideas would nev­er have received the fatal impulse that led to my ruin. But the cur­so­ry glance my father had tak­en of my vol­ume by no means assured me that he was acquaint­ed with its con­tents, and I con­tin­ued to read with the great­est avid­i­ty.

When I returned home my first care was to pro­cure the whole works of this author, and after­wards of Paracel­sus and Alber­tus Mag­nus. I read and stud­ied the wild fan­cies of these writ­ers with delight; they appeared to me trea­sures known to few besides myself. I have described myself as always hav­ing been imbued with a fer­vent long­ing to pen­e­trate the secrets of nature. In spite of the intense labour and won­der­ful dis­cov­er­ies of mod­ern philoso­phers, I always came from my stud­ies dis­con­tent­ed and unsat­is­fied. Sir Isaac New­ton is said to have avowed that he felt like a child pick­ing up shells beside the great and unex­plored ocean of truth. Those of his suc­ces­sors in each branch of nat­ur­al phi­los­o­phy with whom I was acquaint­ed appeared even to my boy’s appre­hen­sions as tyros engaged in the same pursuit.

The untaught peas­ant beheld the ele­ments around him and was acquaint­ed with their prac­ti­cal uses. The most learned philoso­pher knew lit­tle more. He had par­tial­ly unveiled the face of Nature, but her immor­tal lin­ea­ments were still a won­der and a mys­tery. He might dis­sect, anatomise, and give names; but, not to speak of a final cause, caus­es in their sec­ondary and ter­tiary grades were utter­ly unknown to him. I had gazed upon the for­ti­fi­ca­tions and imped­i­ments that seemed to keep human beings from enter­ing the citadel of nature, and rash­ly and igno­rant­ly I had repined.

But here were books, and here were men who had pen­e­trat­ed deep­er and knew more. I took their word for all that they averred, and I became their dis­ci­ple. It may appear strange that such should arise in the eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry; but while I fol­lowed the rou­tine of edu­ca­tion in the schools of Gene­va, I was, to a great degree, self-taught with regard to my favourite stud­ies. My father was not sci­en­tif­ic, and I was left to strug­gle with a child’s blind­ness, added to a student’s thirst for knowl­edge. Under the guid­ance of my new pre­cep­tors I entered with the great­est dili­gence into the search of the philosopher’s stone and the elixir of life; but the lat­ter soon obtained my undi­vid­ed atten­tion. Wealth was an infe­ri­or object, but what glo­ry would attend the dis­cov­ery if I could ban­ish dis­ease from the human frame and ren­der man invul­ner­a­ble to any but a vio­lent death!

Nor were these my only visions. The rais­ing of ghosts or dev­ils was a promise lib­er­al­ly accord­ed by my favourite authors, the ful­fil­ment of which I most eager­ly sought; and if my incan­ta­tions were always unsuc­cess­ful, I attrib­uted the fail­ure rather to my own inex­pe­ri­ence and mis­take than to a want of skill or fideli­ty in my instruc­tors. And thus for a time I was occu­pied by explod­ed sys­tems, min­gling, like an unadept, a thou­sand con­tra­dic­to­ry the­o­ries and floun­der­ing des­per­ate­ly in a very slough of mul­ti­far­i­ous knowl­edge, guid­ed by an ardent imag­i­na­tion and child­ish rea­son­ing, till an acci­dent again changed the cur­rent of my ideas.

When I was about fif­teen years old we had retired to our house near Bel­rive, when we wit­nessed a most vio­lent and ter­ri­ble thun­der­storm. It advanced from behind the moun­tains of Jura, and the thun­der burst at once with fright­ful loud­ness from var­i­ous quar­ters of the heav­ens. I remained, while the storm last­ed, watch­ing its progress with curios­i­ty and delight. As I stood at the door, on a sud­den I beheld a stream of fire issue from an old and beau­ti­ful oak which stood about twen­ty yards from our house; and so soon as the daz­zling light van­ished, the oak had dis­ap­peared, and noth­ing remained but a blast­ed stump. When we vis­it­ed it the next morn­ing, we found the tree shat­tered in a sin­gu­lar man­ner. It was not splin­tered by the shock, but entire­ly reduced to thin rib­bons of wood. I nev­er beheld any­thing so utter­ly destroyed.

Before this I was not unac­quaint­ed with the more obvi­ous laws of elec­tric­i­ty. On this occa­sion a man of great research in nat­ur­al phi­los­o­phy was with us, and excit­ed by this cat­a­stro­phe, he entered on the expla­na­tion of a the­o­ry which he had formed on the sub­ject of elec­tric­i­ty and gal­vanism, which was at once new and aston­ish­ing to me. All that he said threw great­ly into the shade Cor­nelius Agrip­pa, Alber­tus Mag­nus, and Paracel­sus, the lords of my imag­i­na­tion; but by some fatal­i­ty the over­throw of these men dis­in­clined me to pur­sue my accus­tomed stud­ies. It seemed to me as if noth­ing would or could ever be known. All that had so long engaged my atten­tion sud­den­ly grew despi­ca­ble. By one of those caprices of the mind which we are per­haps most sub­ject to in ear­ly youth, I at once gave up my for­mer occu­pa­tions, set down nat­ur­al his­to­ry and all its prog­e­ny as a deformed and abortive cre­ation, and enter­tained the great­est dis­dain for a would-be sci­ence which could nev­er even step with­in the thresh­old of real knowl­edge. In this mood of mind I betook myself to the math­e­mat­ics and the branch­es of study apper­tain­ing to that sci­ence as being built upon secure foun­da­tions, and so wor­thy of my consideration.

Thus strange­ly are our souls con­struct­ed, and by such slight lig­a­ments are we bound to pros­per­i­ty or ruin. When I look back, it seems to me as if this almost mirac­u­lous change of incli­na­tion and will was the imme­di­ate sug­ges­tion of the guardian angel of my life—the last effort made by the spir­it of preser­va­tion to avert the storm that was even then hang­ing in the stars and ready to envel­op me. Her vic­to­ry was announced by an unusu­al tran­quil­li­ty and glad­ness of soul which fol­lowed the relin­quish­ing of my ancient and lat­ter­ly tor­ment­ing stud­ies. It was thus that I was to be taught to asso­ciate evil with their pros­e­cu­tion, hap­pi­ness with their dis­re­gard.

It was a strong effort of the spir­it of good, but it was inef­fec­tu­al. Des­tiny was too potent, and her immutable laws had decreed my utter and ter­ri­ble destruction.

sub­sist səbˈsɪst v To remain or con­tin­ue in exis­tence: exist, sur­vive, live

ardour ˈɑːdə n A feel­ing of strong ener­gy or eager­ness: zeal

smite smaɪt v pp smote smaɪt pt smit­ten ˈsmɪtᵊn or smit ˈsmɪt or smote Affect sud­den­ly with deep feel­ing: impress, strike, affect, move

aer­i­al ˈeəriəl adj Hav­ing a light, unsub­stan­tial and grace­ful beau­ty: ethe­re­al, imag­i­nary; visionary

majes­tic məˈʤɛstɪk adj Impres­sive or beau­ti­ful in a dig­ni­fied or inspir­ing way: grand, mag­nif­i­cent, impres­sive, superb

won­drous ˈwʌn­drəs adj Extra­or­di­nar­i­ly good or great: won­der­ful; remarkable

sub­lime səˈblaɪm adj Inspir­ing awe, or uplift­ing emo­tion because of its beau­ty: noble, mag­nif­i­cent, glo­ri­ous, impres­sive, tempest

tem­pest ˈtɛm­pɪst n A vio­lent wind­storm, fre­quent­ly accom­pa­nied by rain, snow, or hail: storm, hur­ri­cane, gale, tor­na­do, cyclone, typhoon

tur­bu­lence tɜːb­jələns n A state or con­di­tion of con­fu­sion, move­ment, or agi­ta­tion; dis­or­der: tur­moil, unrest

ample ˈæm­pᵊl adj Of large or great size, amount, extent, or capac­i­ty: siz­able, big, large

earnest ˈɜːnɪst adv Show­ing or express­ing sin­cer­i­ty or seri­ous­ness: seri­ous, keen, grave, intense, steady, ded­i­cat­ed, eager 

akin əˈkɪn adj Sim­i­lar in qual­i­ty or char­ac­ter: sim­i­lar to, like, relat­ed to, cor­re­spond­ing to, par­al­lel to

rap­ture ˈræpʧə n A state of being car­ried away by over­whelm­ing emo­tion or elat­ed bliss: ecsta­sy, delight, enthu­si­asm, joy, spell

to give up ⇒ To cease to do or perform.

cam­pagne ⇒ (French) Coun­try­side. Prob­a­bly in ref­er­ence to a sum­mer home or addi­tion­al residence.

Bel­rive ⇒ A town itu­at­ed with­in the can­ton of Gene­va, Switzer­land. Now known as “Col­longe-Bel­lerive”. The munic­i­pal­i­ty derives its name from the French words “belle” (beau­ti­ful) and “rive” (riv­er).

league liːɡ A unit of dis­tance equal to 3.0 statute miles (4.8 kilo­me­ters).

reside rɪˈza­ɪd v To live per­ma­nent­ly or for a con­sid­er­able time: lodge, dwell

seclu­sion sɪˈk­luːʒᵊn n The act of remov­ing from social con­tact and activ­i­ty: pri­va­cy, iso­la­tion, soli­tude, hiding,

tem­per ˈtɛm­pə n A char­ac­ter­is­tic state of feel­ing: mood, humour, atti­tude, disposition

attach əˈtæʧ n To bind by emo­tion­al ties, as of affec­tion or loy­al­ty: bind, bond, tie

fer­vent­ly ˈfɜːvᵊntli adv With pas­sion­ate warmth and inten­si­ty of emo­tion: fer­vid­ly, fierily

sin­gu­lar ˈsɪŋgjʊlə adj Beyond or devi­at­ing from the usu­al or expect­ed: bizarre, pecu­liar, strange, unusual

enter­prise ˈɛn­təpraɪz n A project or under­tak­ing, espe­cial­ly one that requires bold­ness or effort: project, task, undertaking

for something’s own sake ⇒ Of a pur­suit of some kind, sole­ly due to it being worth­while by itself, as opposed to any oth­er reasons. 

chival­ry ˈʃɪvəl­ri n The medieval sys­tem, prin­ci­ples, and cus­toms of knight­hood: knight­hood

many a some­thing ⇒ Many. (Always fol­lowed by a sin­gu­lar noun.)

enchant­ment ɪnˈʧɑːnt­mənt n A mag­ic spell or the prac­tice of cast­ing mag­ic spells.

knight­ly ˈnaɪtli adj Char­ac­ter­is­tic of the time of chival­ry and knight­hood in the Mid­dle Ages: chival­rous, noble, heroic

mas­quer­ade ˌmæskəˈreɪd n A fes­tive gath­er­ing of peo­ple wear­ing masks and cos­tumes: masked ball

Bat­tle of Ron­ces­valles ⇒ This bat­tle took place between French and Anglo-Por­tuguese forces dur­ing the Penin­su­lar War (1808–1814).

The Round Table ⇒ The leg­endary gath­er­ing place of King Arthur’s knights in the Arthuri­an legend.

King Arthur ⇒ A king of Britain, a folk hero and a cen­tral fig­ure in the medieval lit­er­ary tra­di­tion known as the Mat­ter of Britain.

chival­rous ˈʃɪvəl­rəs adj Hav­ing the qual­i­ties of gal­lantry and hon­or attrib­uted to an ide­al knight.

train treɪn n A pro­ces­sion of peo­ple, vehi­cles, etc, trav­el­ling togeth­er, such as one car­ry­ing sup­plies of ammu­ni­tion or equip­ment in sup­port of a mil­i­tary oper­a­tion: pro­ces­sion

sepul­chre or sep­ul­cher ˈsɛpəlkə A recep­ta­cle for sacred relics: altar

infi­del ˈɪn­fɪdᵊl n A per­son who has no reli­gious belief: unbe­liev­er, non­be­liev­er, athe­ist, heretic, agnos­tic, heathen

indul­gence ɪnˈdʌlʤᵊns n A dis­po­si­tion to yield to the wish­es of some­one:: lenience, lenien­cy

tyrant ɪnˈdʌlʤᵊns n An extreme­ly oppres­sive, unjust, or cru­el ruler: dic­ta­tor, oppressor

lot lɒt n Por­tion in life: fate, des­tiny, fortune

caprice kəˈpriːs n A sud­den or unpre­dictable change of atti­tude, behav­iour, etc: whim, impulse

min­gle ˈmɪŋgl v To mix togeth­er but still stay rec­og­niz­able: mix, com­mix, uni­fy, amal­ga­mate blend, inter­min­gle, com­min­gle, inter­mix, inter­weave, inter­lace, com­bine, merge, fuse, unite

dis­cern dɪˈsɜːn adj To per­ceive with a spe­cial effort of the sens­es or the mind: detect, dis­tin­guish, mark, mind, note, notice, observe, remark, see

pecu­liar­ly pɪˈkjuːliəli adv In an usu­al or strange man­ner: espe­cial­ly, par­tic­u­lar­ly, specially

fil­ial ˈfɪliəl Of or relat­ing to a son or daughter.

vehe­ment ˈviːɪmənt adj Strong, filled with strong or eager feel­ing: strong, emo­tion­al, eager, ardent

tem­per­a­ture ˈtɛm­prəʧə n (Archa­ic) Tem­pera­ment.

indis­crim­i­nate­ly ˌɪndɪˈskrɪmɪnətli adj Not mak­ing or based on care­ful dis­tinc­tions: uns­e­lec­tive, at random

meta­phys­i­cal ˌmɛtəˈfɪzɪkᵊl adj With­out mate­r­i­al form or sub­stance: super­nat­ur­al, spir­i­tu­al, unre­al, intangible

so to speak ⇒ If I can express in that way.

sto­ry stɔːri n (Archa­ic) His­to­ry.

gal­lant ˈɡælənt adj (of a man) Atten­tive to women: chival­rous, cour­te­ous, man­ner­ly, gen­tle­man­ly, polite, gra­cious, atten­tive, courtly

bene­fac­tor ˈbɛnɪfæk­tə n One that gives aid, espe­cial­ly finan­cial aid: sup­port­er, sponsor

shrine ʃraɪn n The tomb of a saint or oth­er holy per­son: sacrar­i­um, sanc­to­ri­um, sanctuary

celes­tial sɪˈlɛstiəl adj Of or relat­ing to the sky or phys­i­cal uni­verse as under­stood in astron­o­my: heav­en­ly

sullen ˈsʌlən adj Gloomy or som­bre in colour: dark

sub­due səbˈd­juː v To over­come and bring under con­trol, as by intim­i­da­tion or per­sua­sion: con­trol, master

sem­blance ˈsɛm­bləns n The state of being some­what like some­thing but not tru­ly or ful­ly the same thing: touch, sug­ges­tion, trace, hint, tinge

aught ɔːt pron Any­thing what­ev­er; any part.

entrench ɪnˈtrɛnʧ v To implant so deeply as to make change near­ly impos­si­ble: embed, fas­ten, fix, root

benef­i­cence bəˈnɛfɪsᵊns n The act of doing good: kind­ness

exquis­ite ˈɛk­skwɪzɪt adj Of such taste­ful beau­ty as to elic­it admi­ra­tion: ele­gant, graceful

dwell up/on some­one or some­thing ⇒ To obses­sive­ly think or wor­ry about something.

rec­ol­lec­tion ˌrɛkəˈlɛkʃən n The abil­i­ty to recall past occur­rences: reten­tion, remembrance

taint teɪnt v To mod­i­fy by a trace of some­thing bad or offen­sive: spoil, mar, deflower, impair, vitiate

gloomy ˈɡluː­mi adj Par­tial­ly or total­ly dark, espe­cial­ly dis­mal and drea­ry: black, dark, drea­ry, somber

for fɔː cj Because; since.

igno­ble ɪɡˈnəʊbᵊl adj Com­plete­ly lack­ing nobil­i­ty in char­ac­ter or qual­i­ty or pur­pose: dis­hon­ourable, low, base, mean

swell swɛl v To increase in amount, degree, force, etc: increase, rise, grow, expand

tor­rent ˈtɒrᵊnt n A stream of water flow­ing with great rapid­i­ty and vio­lence: stream, flow, rush, flood, tide

nat­ur­al phi­los­o­phy or the phi­los­o­phy of nature ⇒ The philo­soph­i­cal study of nature and the phys­i­cal uni­verse that was dom­i­nant before the devel­op­ment of mod­ern sci­ence. It is con­sid­ered to be the pre­cur­sor of nat­ur­al sci­ences such as physics.

predilec­tion ˌpriːdɪˈlɛkʃᵊn n A ten­den­cy to think favor­ably of some­thing in par­tic­u­lar: par­tial­i­ty; pref­er­ence, disposition

Thonon ⇒ A town now belong­ing to the east­ern region of France, near the Swiss border.

inclemen­cy ɪnˈk­lɛmən­si adj Stormy: tur­bu­len­cy

con­fine kənˈ­faɪn v Place lim­its on extent or access: con­strain, restrict, lim­it, bound

Hein­rich Cor­nelius Agrip­pa ⇒ A Ger­man Renais­sance poly­math, physi­cian, legal schol­ar, sol­dier, knight, the­olo­gian, and occult writer. Agrippa’s Three Books of Occult Phi­los­o­phy pub­lished in 1533 drew heav­i­ly upon Kab­bal­ah, Her­meti­cism, and neo-Pla­ton­ism. His book was wide­ly influ­en­tial among eso­teri­cists of the ear­ly mod­ern peri­od, and was con­demned as hereti­cal by the inquisi­tor of Cologne.

apa­thy ˈtɒrᵊnt n The trait of lack­ing enthu­si­asm for or inter­est in things gen­er­al­ly: spir­it­less­ness, numb­ness, indifference

to seemed to ⇒ To appear to one’s own mind, sens­es, etc.

bound baʊnd v To leap for­ward or upward: jump, spring

chimeri­cal kaɪˈmɛrɪkᵊl adj High­ly improb­a­ble or illu­so­ry: fan­ci­ful, fan­tas­tic, fan­tas­ti­cal, imag­i­nary, unreal

train treɪn n A sequence or series, as of events, thoughts, etc: sequence, series, chain, succession

cur­so­ry ˈkɜːsᵊri adj Per­formed with haste and scant atten­tion to detail: brief, rapid, casu­al, hur­ried, care­less, super­fi­cial, hasty

by no means ⇒ In no sense; not at all; absolute­ly not; cer­tain­ly not. 

avid­i­ty əˈvɪdəti n A pos­i­tive feel­ing of want­i­ng to push ahead with some­thing: avid­ness, eager­ness, keenness 

pro­cure prəˈkjʊə v To come into pos­ses­sion of: get, obtain, acquire, secure

Paracel­sus born Theophras­tus von Hohen­heim ⇒ A Swiss physi­cian, alchemist, lay the­olo­gian, and philoso­pher of the Ger­man Renaissance.

Alber­tus Mag­nus OP, also known as Saint Albert the Great, Albert of Swabia or Albert of Cologne ⇒ A Ger­man Domini­can fri­ar, philoso­pher, sci­en­tist, and bish­op, con­sid­ered one of the great­est medieval philoso­phers and thinkers.

imbue ɪmˈb­juː v To inspire or influ­ence thor­ough­ly: per­vade

fer­vent ˈfɜːvənt adv Hav­ing or show­ing great warmth or inten­si­ty of spir­it, feel­ing, enthu­si­asm, etc.: ardent

in spite of ⇒ With­out wor­ry­ing about; although.

Isaac New­ton ⇒ An Eng­lish sci­en­tist and author who was described in his time as a nat­ur­al philoso­pher. He was a key fig­ure in the Sci­en­tif­ic Rev­o­lu­tion and the Enlight­en­ment that fol­lowed. His pio­neer­ing book Philosophiæ Nat­u­ralis Prin­cip­ia Math­e­mat­i­ca (Math­e­mat­i­cal Prin­ci­ples of Nat­ur­al Phi­los­o­phy), first pub­lished in 1687, con­sol­i­dat­ed many pre­vi­ous results and estab­lished clas­si­cal mechanics.

avow əˈvaʊ v To rec­og­nize, often reluc­tant­ly, the real­i­ty or truth of: allow, admit, acknowledge

suc­ces­sor səkˈsɛsə n A per­son who fol­lows next in order or that imme­di­ate­ly replaces some­thing or some­one: sub­sti­tute, replace­ment, heir

appre­hen­sion ˌæprɪˈhɛnʃᵊn n The abil­i­ty to appre­hend or under­stand: under­stand­ing

tyros ˈtaɪərəʊ n A begin­ner in learn­ing some­thing: abecedar­i­an, begin­ner, fresh­ma, novice

peas­ant ˈpɛzᵊnt n A mem­ber of a class of small farm­ers or farm labor­ers of low social rank.

behold bɪˈhəʊld pp, pt beheld bɪˈhɛld v To appre­hend some­thing by use of the eyes: see, per­ceive

unveil ʌnˈveɪl v To make some­thing secret or con­cealed known or pub­lic: divulge; reveal

immor­tal ɪˈmɔːtᵊl adj Not sub­ject to death: time­less, eter­nal, everlasting

lin­ea­ment ˈlɪnɪəmənt n A dis­tinc­tive shape, con­tour, or line, espe­cial­ly of the face.

dis­sect dɪˈsɛkt n To cut apart (an ani­mal body, plant, etc.) to exam­ine the struc­ture and rela­tion of parts: ana­lyze, anatomize

anatomise əˈnætə­maɪz v To sep­a­rate into parts for study: ana­lyze, break down, dis­sect, resolve

ter­tiary ˈtɜːʃᵊri adj Third in place, order, degree, or rank: third

utter­ly ˈʌtəli adv Com­plete­ly and with­out qual­i­fi­ca­tion: com­plete­ly, absolute­ly, entire­ly, totally

for­ti­fi­ca­tion ˌfɔːtɪfɪˈkeɪʃᵊn A wall, mound, etc, used to pro­tect a place

imped­i­ment ɪmˈpɛdɪmənt n Some­thing imma­te­r­i­al that inter­feres with or delays action or progress: obsta­cle, hin­drance, difficulty

citadel ˈsɪtədɛl adj A for­ti­fied place attached to, or with­in, a city: bas­tion

rash­ly ˈræʃli adj With­out care­ful con­sid­er­a­tion of the pos­si­ble con­se­quences: impetu­ous­ly

igno­rant­ly ˈɪɡnᵊrᵊntli adj In lack­ing edu­ca­tion or knowl­edge manner: 

repine rɪˈ­paɪn v To be dis­con­tent­ed or low in spir­its and feel or express dejec­tion or dis­con­tent: com­plain

aver əˈvɜː v To express an opin­ion, judg­ment, or posi­tion: affirm, allege, argue, assert

dis­ci­ple dɪˈsaɪpᵊl n Some­one who believes and helps to spread the doc­trine of anoth­er: fol­low­er, adherent

pre­cep­tor prɪˈsɛp­tə n Teacher at a uni­ver­si­ty or col­lege: instruc­tor, teacher, don 

dili­gence ˈdɪlɪʤəns n Earnest and per­sis­tent appli­ca­tion to an under­tak­ing; steady effort: care, activ­i­ty, atten­tion, per­se­ver­ance, earnest­ness, atten­tive­ness, assiduity

philosopher’s stone ⇒ A sub­stance that was believed to have the pow­er of trans­mut­ing base met­al into gold. Also called elixir.

elixir ɪˈlɪk­sə n A sub­stance believed to main­tain life indefinitely.

infe­ri­or ɪnˈfɪəriə adj Low or low­er in order, degree, or rank: low­er, junior, minor, secondary

ban­ish ˈbænɪʃ v To dri­ve away: expel

frame freɪm v (Obso­lete) The struc­ture or physique of a human or ani­mal body: shape; form.

invul­ner­a­ble ɪnˈvʌl­nᵊrəbᵊl adj Inca­pable of being wound­ed, hurt, dam­aged, etc, either phys­i­cal­ly or emo­tion­al­ly: invin­ci­ble, impenetrable

but bʌt adv (Archa­ic) Mere­ly; just; only.

accord əˈkɔːd v To be in agree­ment or har­mo­ny: agree

incan­ta­tion ˌɪnkænˈteɪʃᵊn n Rit­u­al recita­tion of ver­bal charms or spells to pro­duce a mag­ic effect: chant, spell

attribute əˈtrɪb­juːt v To regard as result­ing from a spec­i­fied cause: ascribe, cred­it, refer, trace, assign

fideli­ty fɪˈdɛlɪti n The qual­i­ty of being faith­ful: loy­al­ty, ded­i­ca­tion, faithfulness

unadept ˌʌnˈædɛpt n A per­son who is not pro­fi­cient in some­thing requir­ing skill or man­u­al dex­ter­i­ty: awk­ward, clum­sy, inept, unskilled, amateurish

con­tra­dic­to­ry ˌkɒn­trəˈdɪk­tᵊri adj Unable to be both true at the same time: mutu­al­ly exclusive

floun­der ˈflaʊndə v To move clum­si­ly or with lit­tle progress, as through water or mud: strug­gle, stum­ble, tum­ble, muddle

slough slaʊ n A swamp, marsh, bog, or pond: wal­low, welter

mul­ti­far­i­ous ˌmʌltɪˈfeəriəs adj Of many and var­i­ous kinds: mul­ti­fac­eted, many-sided, miscellaneous

ardent ˈɑːdᵊnt adj Express­ing or char­ac­ter­ized by warmth of feel­ing: pas­sion­ate

Bel­rive ⇒ A town itu­at­ed with­in the can­ton of Gene­va, Switzer­land. Now known as “Col­longe-Bel­lerive”. The munic­i­pal­i­ty derives its name from the French words “belle” (beau­ti­ful) and “rive” (riv­er).

thun­der­storm ˈθʌndəstɔːm n A tran­sient, some­times vio­lent storm of thun­der and light­ning, often accom­pa­nied by rain and some­times hail.

Jura ⇒ Sub-alpine moun­tain range sit­u­at­ed north of the West­ern Alps.The Jura moun­tain range is main­ly locat­ed in France and Switzer­land, the range con­tin­ues north­east­wards through north­ern Switzer­land and Germany.

at once ⇒ With­out delay; at the same time; immediately.

so soon as ⇒ As ear­ly as.

daz­zling ˈdæzᵊlɪŋ adj So bright as to blind some­one tem­porar­i­ly: blaz­ing, blind­ing, glaring

stump stʌmp n The bot­tom part of a tree that is left in the ground after the rest of it has been cut down.{stump}

shat­ter ˈʃætə v To break sud­den­ly into very small pieces, or to make some­thing break in this way.

splin­ter ˈsplɪn­tə v To split or break into sharp, slen­der pieces; form splin­ters: cleave, split

gal­vanism ˈɡælvənɪzᵊm n 1. Direct-cur­rent elec­tric­i­ty, espe­cial­ly when pro­duced chem­i­cal­ly: voltaism

2. Ther­a­peu­tic appli­ca­tion of direct-cur­rent elec­tric­i­ty, espe­cial­ly the elec­tric stim­u­la­tion of nerves and muscle.

put some­one or some­thing in the shade ⇒ To make some­one or some­thing seem less inter­est­ing, impor­tant, or remark­able by comparison.

over­throw ˌəʊvəˈθrəʊ n The act of dis­turb­ing the mind or body: derange­ment, upset 

dis­in­cline ˌdɪsɪnˈk­laɪn v To make or be unwill­ing, reluc­tant, or averse: indis­pose

despi­ca­ble ˈdɛspɪkəbᵊl adj Deserv­ing of con­tempt or scorn: vile, con­temptible, mean, shameful

to set down ⇒ To regard; consider.

prog­e­ny ˈprɒʤəni n Some­thing that is the prod­uct of some­thing else: off­spring

abortive əˈbɔːtɪv adj Imper­fect­ly devel­oped: rudi­men­ta­ry

dis­dain dɪsˈdeɪn n Feel­ing or show of supe­ri­or­i­ty and dis­like: con­tempt, scorn

betake bɪˈteɪk v (Archa­ic) To apply or com­mit one­self to: devote

apper­tain ˌæpəˈteɪn v To belong as a prop­er func­tion or part: per­tain, belong

lig­a­ment ˈlɪɡəmənt n A uni­fy­ing or con­nect­ing tie or bond: lig­a­ture, link, bond, tie

to be bound to ⇒ Be cer­tain or des­tined to.

pros­per­i­ty prɒsˈpɛrəti n The con­di­tion of hav­ing good for­tune: suc­cess, wealth

guardian angel ⇒ A guardian angel is a type of angel that is assigned to pro­tect and guide a par­tic­u­lar per­son, group or nation.

avert əˈvɜːt v To turn away or aside.

tran­quil­li­ty træŋˈk­wɪlɪti n A state of peace and qui­et: quiet­ness, relax­ation, repose, calmness

relin­quish rɪˈlɪŋk­wɪʃ v To give up or aban­don: leave, release, drop, aban­don, resign, desert, quit

tor­ment tɔːˈmɛnt v To cause to under­go great phys­i­cal pain or men­tal anguish: tor­ture

pros­e­cu­tion ˌprɒsɪˈkjuːʃᵊn Tn he act of begin­ning and car­ry­ing through to com­ple­tion: dis­charge, effec­tu­a­tion, exe­cu­tion, per­for­mance.

dis­re­gard ˌdɪs­rɪˈɡɑːd n To give lit­tle or no atten­tion to: ignore, neglect

inef­fec­tu­al ˌɪnɪˈfɛk­tjʊəl adj Hav­ing no use­ful result: use­less, vain, unsuc­cess­ful, futile, fruitless

potent ˈpəʊtᵊnt adj Pos­sess­ing great strength: pow­er­ful, mighty

immutable ɪˈmjuːtəbᵊl adj Not sub­ject or sus­cep­ti­ble to change or vari­a­tion in form or qual­i­ty or nature: inal­ter­able, invari­able, rigid, unal­ter­able, unchangeable

decree dɪˈkriː v To com­mand, ordain, or decide by or as if by decree: ordain, pre­scribe

utter ˈʌtə adj Com­plete and absolute.