Frankenstein

Chapter 4

From this day nat­ur­al phi­los­o­phy, and par­tic­u­lar­ly chem­istry, in the most com­pre­hen­sive sense of the term, became near­ly my sole occu­pa­tion. I read with ardour those works, so full of genius and dis­crim­i­na­tion, which mod­ern inquir­ers have writ­ten on these sub­jects. I attend­ed the lec­tures and cul­ti­vat­ed the acquain­tance of the men of sci­ence of the uni­ver­si­ty, and I found even in M. Krempe a great deal of sound sense and real infor­ma­tion, com­bined, it is true, with a repul­sive phys­iog­no­my and man­ners, but not on that account the less valu­able. In M. Wald­man I found a true friend. His gen­tle­ness was nev­er tinged by dog­ma­tism, and his instruc­tions were giv­en with an air of frank­ness and good nature that ban­ished every idea of pedantry. In a thou­sand ways he smoothed for me the path of knowl­edge and made the most abstruse inquiries clear and facile to my appre­hen­sion. My appli­ca­tion was at first fluc­tu­at­ing and uncer­tain; it gained strength as I pro­ceed­ed and soon became so ardent and eager that the stars often dis­ap­peared in the light of morn­ing whilst I was yet engaged in my laboratory.

As I applied so close­ly, it may be eas­i­ly con­ceived that my progress was rapid. My ardour was indeed the aston­ish­ment of the stu­dents, and my pro­fi­cien­cy that of the mas­ters. Pro­fes­sor Krempe often asked me, with a sly smile, how Cor­nelius Agrip­pa went on, whilst M. Wald­man expressed the most heart­felt exul­ta­tion in my progress. Two years passed in this man­ner, dur­ing which I paid no vis­it to Gene­va, but was engaged, heart and soul, in the pur­suit of some dis­cov­er­ies which I hoped to make. None but those who have expe­ri­enced them can con­ceive of the entice­ments of sci­ence. In oth­er stud­ies you go as far as oth­ers have gone before you, and there is noth­ing more to know; but in a sci­en­tif­ic pur­suit there is con­tin­u­al food for dis­cov­ery and won­der. A mind of mod­er­ate capac­i­ty which close­ly pur­sues one study must infal­li­bly arrive at great pro­fi­cien­cy in that study; and I, who con­tin­u­al­ly sought the attain­ment of one object of pur­suit and was sole­ly wrapped up in this, improved so rapid­ly that at the end of two years I made some dis­cov­er­ies in the improve­ment of some chem­i­cal instru­ments, which pro­cured me great esteem and admi­ra­tion at the uni­ver­si­ty. When I had arrived at this point and had become as well acquaint­ed with the the­o­ry and prac­tice of nat­ur­al phi­los­o­phy as depend­ed on the lessons of any of the pro­fes­sors at Ingol­stadt, my res­i­dence there being no longer con­ducive to my improve­ments, I thought of return­ing to my friends and my native town, when an inci­dent hap­pened that pro­tract­ed my stay.

One of the phe­nom­e­na which had pecu­liar­ly attract­ed my atten­tion was the struc­ture of the human frame, and, indeed, any ani­mal endued with life. Whence, I often asked myself, did the prin­ci­ple of life pro­ceed? It was a bold ques­tion, and one which has ever been con­sid­ered as a mys­tery; yet with how many things are we upon the brink of becom­ing acquaint­ed, if cow­ardice or care­less­ness did not restrain our inquiries. I revolved these cir­cum­stances in my mind and deter­mined thence­forth to apply myself more par­tic­u­lar­ly to those branch­es of nat­ur­al phi­los­o­phy which relate to phys­i­ol­o­gy. Unless I had been ani­mat­ed by an almost super­nat­ur­al enthu­si­asm, my appli­ca­tion to this study would have been irk­some and almost intol­er­a­ble. To exam­ine the caus­es of life, we must first have endue to death. I became acquaint­ed with the sci­ence of anato­my, but this was not suf­fi­cient; I must also observe the nat­ur­al decay and cor­rup­tion of the human body. In my edu­ca­tion my father had tak­en the great­est pre­cau­tions that my mind should be impressed with no super­nat­ur­al hor­rors. I do not ever remem­ber to have trem­bled at a tale of super­sti­tion or to have feared the appari­tion of a spir­it. Dark­ness had no effect upon my fan­cy, and a church­yard was to me mere­ly the recep­ta­cle of bod­ies deprived of life, which, from being the seat of beau­ty and strength, had become food for the worm. Now I was led to exam­ine the cause and progress of this decay and forced to spend days and nights in vaults and char­nel-hous­es. My atten­tion was fixed upon every object the most insup­port­able to the del­i­ca­cy of the human feel­ings. I saw how the fine form of man was degrad­ed and wast­ed; I beheld the cor­rup­tion of death suc­ceed to the bloom­ing cheek of life; I saw how the worm inher­it­ed the won­ders of the eye and brain. I paused, exam­in­ing and analysing all the minu­ti­ae of cau­sa­tion, as exem­pli­fied in the change from life to death, and death to life, until from the midst of this dark­ness a sud­den light broke in upon me—a light so bril­liant and won­drous, yet so sim­ple, that while I became dizzy with the immen­si­ty of the prospect which it illus­trat­ed, I was sur­prised that among so many men of genius who had direct­ed their inquiries towards the same sci­ence, that I alone should be reserved to dis­cov­er so aston­ish­ing a secret.

Remem­ber, I am not record­ing the vision of a mad­man. The sun does not more cer­tain­ly shine in the heav­ens than that which I now affirm is true. Some mir­a­cle might have pro­duced it, yet the stages of the dis­cov­ery were dis­tinct and prob­a­ble. After days and nights of incred­i­ble labour and fatigue, I suc­ceed­ed in dis­cov­er­ing the cause of gen­er­a­tion and life; nay, more, I became myself capa­ble of bestow­ing ani­ma­tion upon life­less matter.

The aston­ish­ment which I had at first expe­ri­enced on this dis­cov­ery soon gave place to delight and rap­ture. After so much time spent in painful labour, to arrive at once at the sum­mit of my desires was the most grat­i­fy­ing con­sum­ma­tion of my toils. But this dis­cov­ery was so great and over­whelm­ing that all the steps by which I had been pro­gres­sive­ly led to it were oblit­er­at­ed, and I beheld only the result. What had been the study and desire of the wis­est men since the cre­ation of the world was now with­in my grasp. Not that, like a mag­ic scene, it all opened upon me at once: the infor­ma­tion I had obtained was of a nature rather to direct my endeav­ours so soon as I should point them towards the object of my search than to exhib­it that object already accom­plished. I was like the Ara­bi­an who had been buried with the dead and found a pas­sage to life, aid­ed only by one glim­mer­ing and seem­ing­ly inef­fec­tu­al light.

I see by your eager­ness and the won­der and hope which your eyes express, my friend, that you expect to be informed of the secret with which I am acquaint­ed; that can­not be; lis­ten patient­ly until the end of my sto­ry, and you will eas­i­ly per­ceive why I am reserved upon that sub­ject. I will not lead you on, unguard­ed and ardent as I then was, to your destruc­tion and infal­li­ble mis­ery. Learn from me, if not by my pre­cepts, at least by my exam­ple, how dan­ger­ous is the acquire­ment of knowl­edge and how much hap­pi­er that man is who believes his native town to be the world, than he who aspires to become greater than his nature will allow.

When I found so aston­ish­ing a pow­er placed with­in my hands, I hes­i­tat­ed a long time con­cern­ing the man­ner in which I should employ it. Although I pos­sessed the capac­i­ty of bestow­ing ani­ma­tion, yet to pre­pare a frame for the recep­tion of it, with all its intri­ca­cies of fibres, mus­cles, and veins, still remained a work of incon­ceiv­able dif­fi­cul­ty and labour. I doubt­ed at first whether I should attempt the cre­ation of a being like myself, or one of sim­pler orga­ni­za­tion; but my imag­i­na­tion was too much exalt­ed by my first suc­cess to per­mit me to doubt of my abil­i­ty to give life to an ani­mal as com­plex and won­der­ful as man. The mate­ri­als at present with­in my com­mand hard­ly appeared ade­quate to so ardu­ous an under­tak­ing, but I doubt­ed not that I should ulti­mate­ly suc­ceed. I pre­pared myself for a mul­ti­tude of revers­es; my oper­a­tions might be inces­sant­ly baf­fled, and at last my work be imper­fect, yet when I con­sid­ered the improve­ment which every day takes place in sci­ence and mechan­ics, I was encour­aged to hope my present attempts would at least lay the foun­da­tions of future suc­cess. Nor could I con­sid­er the mag­ni­tude and com­plex­i­ty of my plan as any argu­ment of its imprac­ti­ca­bil­i­ty. It was with these feel­ings that I began the cre­ation of a human being. As the minute­ness of the parts formed a great hin­drance to my speed, I resolved, con­trary to my first inten­tion, to make the being of a gigan­tic stature, that is to say, about eight feet in height, and pro­por­tion­ably large. After hav­ing formed this deter­mi­na­tion and hav­ing spent some months in suc­cess­ful­ly col­lect­ing and arrang­ing my mate­ri­als, I began.

No one can con­ceive the vari­ety of feel­ings which bore me onwards, like a hur­ri­cane, in the first enthu­si­asm of suc­cess. Life and death appeared to me ide­al bounds, which I should first break through, and pour a tor­rent of light into our dark world. A new species would bless me as its cre­ator and source; many hap­py and excel­lent natures would owe their being to me. No father could claim the grat­i­tude of his child so com­plete­ly as I should deserve theirs. Pur­su­ing these reflec­tions, I thought that if I could bestow ani­ma­tion upon life­less mat­ter, I might in process of time (although I now found it impos­si­ble) renew life where death had appar­ent­ly devot­ed the body to corruption.

These thoughts sup­port­ed my spir­its, while I pur­sued my under­tak­ing with unremit­ting ardour. My cheek had grown pale with study, and my per­son had become ema­ci­at­ed with con­fine­ment. Some­times, on the very brink of cer­tain­ty, I failed; yet still I clung to the hope which the next day or the next hour might realise. One secret which I alone pos­sessed was the hope to which I had ded­i­cat­ed myself; and the moon gazed on my mid­night labours, while, with unre­laxed and breath­less eager­ness, I pur­sued nature to her hid­ing-places. Who shall con­ceive the hor­rors of my secret toil as I dab­bled among the unhal­lowed damps of the grave or tor­tured the liv­ing ani­mal to ani­mate the life­less clay? My limbs now trem­ble, and my eyes swim with the remem­brance; but then a resist­less and almost fran­tic impulse urged me for­ward; I seemed to have lost all soul or sen­sa­tion but for this one pur­suit. It was indeed but a pass­ing trance, that only made me feel with renewed acute­ness so soon as, the unnat­ur­al stim­u­lus ceas­ing to oper­ate, I had returned to my old habits. I col­lect­ed bones from char­nel-hous­es and dis­turbed, with pro­fane fin­gers, the tremen­dous secrets of the human frame. In a soli­tary cham­ber, or rather cell, at the top of the house, and sep­a­rat­ed from all the oth­er apart­ments by a gallery and stair­case, I kept my work­shop of filthy cre­ation; my eye­balls were start­ing from their sock­ets in attend­ing to the details of my employ­ment. The dis­sect­ing room and the slaugh­ter-house fur­nished many of my mate­ri­als; and often did my human nature turn with loathing from my occu­pa­tion, whilst, still urged on by an eager­ness which per­pet­u­al­ly increased, I brought my work near to a conclusion.

The sum­mer months passed while I was thus engaged, heart and soul, in one pur­suit. It was a most beau­ti­ful sea­son; nev­er did the fields bestow a more plen­ti­ful har­vest or the vines yield a more lux­u­ri­ant vin­tage, but my eyes were insen­si­ble to the charms of nature. And the same feel­ings which made me neglect the scenes around me caused me also to for­get those friends who were so many miles absent, and whom I had not seen for so long a time. I knew my silence dis­qui­et­ed them, and I well remem­bered the words of my father: “I know that while you are pleased with your­self you will think of us with affec­tion, and we shall hear reg­u­lar­ly from you. You must par­don me if I regard any inter­rup­tion in your cor­re­spon­dence as a proof that your oth­er duties are equal­ly neglect­ed.”

I knew well there­fore what would be my father’s feel­ings, but I could not tear my thoughts from my employ­ment, loath­some in itself, but which had tak­en an irre­sistible hold of my imag­i­na­tion. I wished, as it were, to pro­cras­ti­nate all that relat­ed to my feel­ings of affec­tion until the great object, which swal­lowed up every habit of my nature, should be completed.

I then thought that my father would be unjust if he ascribed my neglect to vice or fault­i­ness on my part, but I am now con­vinced that he was jus­ti­fied in con­ceiv­ing that I should not be alto­geth­er free from blame. A human being in per­fec­tion ought always to pre­serve a calm and peace­ful mind and nev­er to allow pas­sion or a tran­si­to­ry desire to dis­turb his tran­quil­li­ty. I do not think that the pur­suit of knowl­edge is an excep­tion to this rule. If the study to which you apply your­self has a ten­den­cy to weak­en your affec­tions and to destroy your taste for those sim­ple plea­sures in which no alloy can pos­si­bly mix, then that study is cer­tain­ly unlaw­ful, that is to say, not befit­ting the human mind. If this rule were always observed; if no man allowed any pur­suit what­so­ev­er to inter­fere with the tran­quil­li­ty of his domes­tic affec­tions, Greece had not been enslaved, Cæsar would have spared his coun­try, Amer­i­ca would have been dis­cov­ered more grad­u­al­ly, and the empires of Mex­i­co and Peru had not been destroyed.

But I for­get that I am mor­al­iz­ing in the most inter­est­ing part of my tale, and your looks remind me to proceed.

My father made no reproach in his let­ters and only took notice of my silence by inquir­ing into my occu­pa­tions more par­tic­u­lar­ly than before. Win­ter, spring, and sum­mer passed away dur­ing my labours; but I did not watch the blos­som or the expand­ing leaves—sights which before always yield­ed me supreme delight—so deeply was I engrossed in my occu­pa­tion. The leaves of that year had with­ered before my work drew near to a close, and now every day showed me more plain­ly how well I had suc­ceed­ed. But my enthu­si­asm was checked by my anx­i­ety, and I appeared rather like one doomed by slav­ery to toil in the mines, or any oth­er unwhole­some trade than an artist occu­pied by his favourite employ­ment. Every night I was oppressed by a slow fever, and I became ner­vous to a most painful degree; the fall of a leaf star­tled me, and I shunned my fel­low crea­tures as if I had been guilty of a crime. Some­times I grew alarmed at the wreck I per­ceived that I had become; the ener­gy of my pur­pose alone sus­tained me: my labours would soon end, and I believed that exer­cise and amuse­ment would then dri­ve away incip­i­ent dis­ease; and I promised myself both of these when my cre­ation should be complete.

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.

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

inquir­er ɪnˈk­waɪərə n Some­one who asks ques­tions: enquir­er, exam­in­er, inves­ti­ga­tor, ques­tion­er, researcher 

great deal ⇒ A large amount or degree.

repul­sive rɪˈpʌl­sɪv adj So extreme­ly ugly as to be ter­ri­fy­ing: hideous, ugly

phys­iog­no­my ˌfɪz­iˈɒnə­mi n A person’s fea­tures or char­ac­ter­is­tic expres­sion con­sid­ered as an indi­ca­tion of per­son­al­i­ty: vis­age, countenance

on that account ⇒ Because of that.

tinge tɪnʤ v To affect slight­ly, as with a con­trast­ing qual­i­ty: affect, impact, touch

dog­ma­tism ˈdɒɡməˈtɪzᵊm n Arro­gant, stub­born asser­tion of opin­ion or belief.

air n Gen­er­al char­ac­ter or appear­ance: aura

ban­ish ˈbænɪʃ v To dri­ve away: expel

pedantry ˈpɛdən­tri n The osten­ta­tious dis­play of aca­d­e­m­ic knowl­edge, or undue atten­tion paid to minor details or for­mal rules: hair­split­ting, punc­til­ious­ness, pettifoggery

abstruse æbˈstruːs adj Not easy to under­stand: recon­dite, deep, esoteric

facile ˈfæsaɪl adj Done or achieved with lit­tle effort or dif­fi­cul­ty: easy, effort­less, sim­ple, light

appre­hen­sion ˌæprɪˈhɛnʃᵊn n The abil­i­ty to appre­hend or under­stand: under­stand­ing

at first ⇒ In the beggining.

fluc­tu­ate ˈflʌk­tjʊeɪt v To vary irreg­u­lar­ly: wave

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

pro­fi­cien­cy prəˈfɪʃən­si n Nat­ur­al or acquired facil­i­ty in a spe­cif­ic activ­i­ty: abil­i­ty, skill, com­mand, mas­tery, expertness

sly slaɪ n Marked by skill in decep­tion: cun­ning, slick, tricky

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.

heart­felt ˈhɑːt­fɛlt adj Deeply or sin­cere­ly felt: earnest, devout, dear, sin­cere, honest

exul­ta­tion ˌɛgzʌlˈteɪʃən n A feel­ing of extreme joy over a suc­cess or vic­to­ry: exul­tance, exul­tan­cy, jubi­lance, jubi­la­tion, triumph

to pay a vis­it to some­thing ⇒ To vis­it some­thing, espe­cial­ly in a brief or infor­mal manner.

none but ⇒ Only.

entice­ment ɪnˈ­taɪs­mənt n Some­thing that seduces or has the qual­i­ty to seduce: temp­ta­tion

infal­li­ble ɪnˈfæləbl adj Inca­pable of fail­ure or error: sure, cer­tain, reli­able, unerr­ing, unfailing

attain­ment əˈteɪn­mənt n The act of achiev­ing an aim: accom­plish­ment, achievement

sole­ly ˈsəʊl­li n With­out any oth­ers being includ­ed or involved: only, alone, exclu­sive­ly, entirely

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

esteem ɪˈstiːm n High regard or respect; good opin­ion: respect, regard, hon­our, con­sid­er­a­tion, admi­ra­tion, estimation,

Ingol­stadt ⇒ An inde­pen­dent city on the Danube in Upper Bavaria, Germany.

con­ducive kənˈd­juːsɪv adj Con­tribute to a result; tend­ing to bring about or cause: con­tribu­tive

pro­tract prəˈtrækt v To draw out or length­en in time: pro­long, draw out, extend, lengthen

phe­nom­e­non fəˈnɒmɪnən n pl phe­nom­e­na (Physics) An observ­able event.

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

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

endue ɪnˈd­juː v Give qual­i­ties or abil­i­ties to: endow, gift, indue, invest, empower

whence wɛns conj By rea­son of which; from which.

upon the brink of some­thing ⇒ On the verge of doing some­thing or of hav­ing some immi­nent event hap­pen, espe­cial­ly that which is bad or disastrous.

cow­ardice ˈkaʊədɪs n Igno­ble fear in the face of dan­ger or pain: faint-heart­ed­ness, fearfulness, 

restrain rɪsˈtreɪn v To stop some­one from doing some­thing, often by using phys­i­cal force: con­fine, hold

revolve rɪˈvɒlv v To pon­der or reflect on: 

thence­forth rɪˈvɒlv adv From that time onward: there­after

super­nat­ur­al ˌsuːpəˈnæʧᵊrᵊl adj Attrib­uted to a pow­er that seems to vio­late or go beyond nat­ur­al force: para­nor­mal, mys­te­ri­ous, unnatural

irk­some ˈɜːk­səm adj Caus­ing annoy­ance, weari­ness or vex­a­tion: tedious

decay dɪˈkeɪ v (Biol­o­gy) To break down into com­po­nent parts: rot, dis­in­te­grate, deteriorate

pre­cau­tion prɪˈkɔːʃᵊn n An action tak­en in advance to pro­tect against pos­si­ble dan­ger, fail­ure, or injury: care, fore­thought, cau­tion, measure

super­sti­tion ˈsuːpəˈstɪʃᵊn n An irra­tional belief aris­ing from igno­rance or fear: belief

appari­tion ˌæpəˈrɪʃᵊn n A ghost­ly appear­ing fig­ure: ghost, phan­tom, spirit

recep­ta­cle rɪˈsɛp­təkᵊl n A con­tain­er that is used to put or keep things in: hold­er, vessel

deprive dɪˈpraɪv v Pre­vent a per­son from hav­ing or using some­thing: rob of

vault vɔːlt n A bur­ial cham­ber, espe­cial­ly when underground.

char­nel ˈʧɑːəl n A repos­i­to­ry for the bones or bod­ies of the dead; a char­nel house.

degrade dɪˈ­greɪd v To low­er in qual­i­ty or val­ue; make infe­ri­or or less valu­able: break down, decay, degen­er­ate, atrophy

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

minu­ti­ae maɪˈn­juːʃi­aɪ n Small or triv­ial details: details, par­tic­u­lars, trifles

cau­sa­tion kɔːˈzeɪʃᵊn n The rela­tion of cause to effect: causal­i­ty

exem­pli­fy ɪɡˈzɛm­plɪ­faɪ v Clar­i­fy by giv­ing an exam­ple of: illus­trate, instance, show, rep­re­sent, dis­play, demonstrate

won­drous ˈwʌn­drəs adj Extra­or­di­nar­i­ly good or great: won­der­ful; remarkable

dizzy ˈdɪzi adj Affect­ed with a whirling or reel­ing sen­sa­tion: gid­dy, ver­tig­i­nous, woozy

immen­si­ty ɪˈmɛn­səti n Unusu­al large­ness in size or extent or num­ber: vast­ness, enormousness

affirm əˈfɜːm v To declare pos­i­tive­ly; assert to be true: declare, state, main­tain, assert, certify

nay neɪ adv Not so: no, nix

bestow bɪˈstəʊ v To give for­mal­ly or offi­cial­ly: present, grant

to gave place to ⇒ (For­mal) Be replaced by.

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

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

grat­i­fy­ing ˈɡrætɪ­faɪɪŋ adj Pleas­ing to the mind or feel­ing: pleas­ant, pleas­ing, plea­sur­able, satisfying

con­sum­ma­tion ˌkɒn­səˈmeɪʃᵊn n The act of bring­ing to com­ple­tion or fruition: achieve­ment, per­fec­tion, real­iza­tion, ful­fil­ment, culmination

toil tɔɪl n Work that is dif­fi­cult and unpleas­ant and that lasts for a long time: hard work, labor

oblit­er­ate əˈblɪtəreɪtɪd v To remove or destroy com­plete­ly so as to leave no trace: wipe out, kill, efface

be with­in grasp ⇒ To be very close to being apprehended.

endeav­our ɪnˈdɛvə v To attempt: essay, try, assay, seek

glim­mer ˈɡlɪmə v A dim or inter­mit­tent flick­er or flash of light: gleam, shine, glow, sparkle, glit­ter, blink

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

lead some­one on ⇒ To guide some­one onward.

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

infal­li­ble ɪnˈfæləbᵊl adj Inca­pable of fail­ure or error: fault­less, unerr­ing, per­fect, impeccable

pre­cepts ˈpriːsɛpts n A rule or prin­ci­ple pre­scrib­ing a par­tic­u­lar course of action or con­duct: rule, order, direc­tion, doc­trine, principle

at least ⇒ If noth­ing else. Not less than.

acquire­ment əˈk­waɪəmənt n An attain­ment, such as a skill or social accom­plish­ment: achieve­ment, acqui­si­tion, attainment

aspire əsˈ­paɪə n To have a great ambi­tion or ulti­mate goal; desire strong­ly: aim, seek dream

intri­ca­cy ˈɪn­trɪkəsi n Marked by elab­o­rate­ly com­plex detail: elab­o­rate­ness, invo­lu­tion, elab­o­ra­tion, com­plex­i­ty, complexness

vein veɪn n Any of the tubu­lar ves­sels that con­vey oxy­gen-deplet­ed blood to the heart.

incon­ceiv­able ˌɪnkənˈsiːvəbl adj Not able to be imag­ined or believed: incred­i­ble, improb­a­ble, unimaginable, 

exalt­ed ɪɡˈzɔːltɪd adj Intense­ly excit­ed: elat­ed, excit­ed, inspired, stim­u­lat­ed, ele­vat­ed, animated 

at present ⇒ At this time, now.

ardu­ous ˈɑːʤuəs adj Dif­fi­cult to accom­plish; demand­ing con­sid­er­able men­tal effort and skil: dif­fi­cult, hard

inces­sant­ly ɪnˈsɛs­ntli adv With­out inter­rup­tion: con­stant­ly, con­tin­u­ous­ly, end­less­ly, ever­last­ing, perpetually

baf­fle ˈbæfᵊld v Hin­der or pre­vent (the efforts, plans, or desires) of: frus­trate, queer, scotch, thwart

at last ⇒ After a long wait; finally.

to take place ⇒ Hap­pen, occur,

to lay the foun­da­tions for some­thing ⇒ To state, out­line, or cre­ate the fun­da­men­tal basis for something.

imprac­ti­ca­bil­i­ty ɪmˌpræk­tɪkəˈbɪləti n The qual­i­ty of not being usable: inutil­i­ty, unuse­ful­ness, uselessness

minute­ness maɪˈn­juːt­nəs n The prop­er­ty of being very small in size: diminu­tive­ness, petiteness

hin­drance ˈhɪn­drəns n Any­thing that pre­vents entry or pas­sage: obsta­cle, imped­i­ment, bar­ri­er, obstruction

gigan­tic ʤaɪˈɡæn­tɪk adj Exceed­ing­ly large in size, extent, or amount, espe­cial­ly for its kind: colos­sal, enor­mous, giant, huge

stature ˈstæʧə n The height of some­thing, esp a per­son or ani­mal when stand­ing: height, build, size, tallness

that is to say ⇒ In oth­er words.

onwards ˈɒn­wədz adv In a direc­tion or toward a posi­tion that is ahead in space or time: for­ward, ahead

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

in process of time ⇒ As time pass­es; at a lat­er time.

unremit­ting ˌʌn­rɪˈmɪtɪŋ adj Unin­ter­rupt­ed in time and indef­i­nite­ly long con­tin­u­ing: inces­sant, nev­er-end­ing, cease­less, per­pet­u­al, unceas­ing, con­stant, persistent

ema­ci­ate ɪˈmeɪsieɪt v To make or become extreme­ly thin, espe­cial­ly as a result of star­va­tion: mac­er­ate, waste

con­fine­ment kənˈ­faɪn­mənt n The act of lim­it­ing or con­di­tion of being lim­it­ed: lim­i­ta­tion, restric­tion, constraint

n the brink of some­thing ⇒ On the verge of doing some­thing or of hav­ing some immi­nent event hap­pen, espe­cial­ly that which is bad or disastrous.

gaze greɪz v To look steadi­ly, intent­ly, and with fixed atten­tion: stare, look

dab­ble ˈdæbᵊl v Dip a foot or hand briefly into a liq­uid: dip, dunk, souse, douse, plunge

unhal­lowed ʌnˈhæləʊd adj Not hal­lowed or con­se­crat­ed: unholy

damp dæmp n Mois­ture that lies or has con­densed on some­thing: mois­ture, humid­i­ty, driz­zle, dew

swim before someone’s eyes ⇒ To appear in one’s field of vision.

fran­tic ˈfræn­tɪk adj Char­ac­ter­ized by rapid and dis­or­dered or ner­vous activ­i­ty: mad

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

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

acute­ness əˈkjuːt­nəs n A sen­si­tiv­i­ty that is keen and high­ly devel­oped: sen­si­tiv­i­ty, sen­si­tive­ness, sensibility

pro­fane prəˈfeɪn adj Marked by con­tempt or irrev­er­ence for what is sacred: blas­phe­mous

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

soli­tary ˈsɒlɪtəri adj Being the only one; sin­gle and iso­lat­ed from oth­ers: lone, lone­some, only, sole

filthy ˈfɪlθi adj Very objec­tion­able: nasty, obnox­ious, dis­gust­ing, loath­some, odi­ous, repugnant

eye­ball ˈaɪbɔːl n The whole round ball that forms an eye.

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

slaugh­ter ˈslɔːtə n The killing of a large num­ber of peo­ple: mas­sacre

loathing ˈləʊðɪŋ n Hate cou­pled with dis­gust: abhor­rence, detes­ta­tion, exe­cra­tion, odi­um, abomination

per­pet­u­al­ly pəˈpɛʧuəli adv With­out inter­rup­tion; for all time: ever­last­ing­ly, con­stant­ly, inces­sant­ly, always, for­ev­er, non-stop

plen­ti­ful ˈplɛn­tɪfᵊl adj Exist­ing in great quan­ti­ty or ample sup­ply: abun­dant

vine vaɪn n A type of climb­ing plant which bears grapes. 

lux­u­ri­ant lʌɡˈʒʊəriənt adj Pro­duced or grow­ing in extreme abun­dance: lush, pro­fuse, riotous, exuberant

vin­tage ˈvɪn­tɪʤ n The yield of wine or grapes from a vine­yard or dis­trict dur­ing one season.

neglect nɪˈglɛkt v To fail to care for or attend to prop­er­ly: dis­re­gard

dis­qui­et dɪˈskwaɪət v Dis­turb in mind or make uneasy or cause to be wor­ried or alarmed: cark, dis­or­der, per­turb, unhinge, dis­tract, trouble

par­don ˈpɑːdᵊn v To make cour­te­ous allowance for: excuse

loath­some ˈləʊðsəm adj Caus­ing or able to cause nau­sea: nau­se­at­ing, nau­seous, noi­some, sick­en­ing, vile

in itself ⇒ With­out the con­sid­er­a­tion of any­thing else.

pro­cras­ti­nate prəʊˈkræstɪneɪt v To put off doing some­thing, espe­cial­ly out of habit­u­al care­less­ness or lazi­ness: delay

ascribe əsˈkraɪb v Attribute or cred­it to: attribute, impute, assign

fault­i­ness ˈfɔːltɪnəs n The state of being defec­tive: defec­tive­ness, imper­fec­tion, imperfectness

tran­si­to­ry ˈtræn­sɪtəri adj Last­ing only for a short time: tempo­rary, momen­tary, ephemer­al, short-lived, fleeting

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

unlaw­ful ʌnˈlɔːfᵊl adj Not con­form­ing to legal­i­ty, moral law, or social con­ven­tion: improp­er, unconventional

that is to say ⇒ In oth­er words.

befit bɪˈfɪt To be appro­pri­ate to or suit­able for to be appro­pri­ate to or suit­able for: beseem, suit

what­so­ev­er ˌwɒt­səʊˈɛvə adj One or some or every or all with­out spec­i­fi­ca­tion: any, what­ev­er

enslave ɪnˈsleɪvd v Make a slave of; bring into servi­tude: sub­ju­gate, sup­press, enthral, yoke, tyrannize,

Gaius Julius Cae­sar ˈsiːzə ⇒ A Roman gen­er­al and states­man. A mem­ber of the First Tri­umvi­rate, Cae­sar led the Roman armies in the Gal­lic Wars before defeat­ing his polit­i­cal rival Pom­pey in a civ­il war, and sub­se­quent­ly became dic­ta­tor from 49 BC until his assas­si­na­tion in 44 BC.

spare speə v To refrain from harm­ing, injur­ing, destroy­ing, or killing: have mer­cy on, par­don, have pity on, release

reproach rɪˈprəʊʧ n A mild rebuke or crit­i­cism: reproof, rep­ri­mand, rebuke, blame

blos­som ˈblɒsəm n A flower or a group of flowers.

engross ɪnˈ­grəʊs v To make busy; occu­py the full atten­tion of: engage, absorb, preoccupy

with­er ˈwɪðəd v To dry up or shriv­el from loss of mois­ture: wilt, dry, shrink, decay, hriv­el, desiccate

unwhole­some ʌnˈhəʊl­səm adj Not con­ducive to moral­i­ty; moral­ly harm­ful: harm­ful, unhealthy, noxious

oppress əˈprɛs v To cause to feel wor­ried or depressed: depress, bur­den, dis­cour­age, torment

star­tle ˈstɑːtᵊld v Move or jump sud­den­ly, as if in sur­prise or alarm: jump, start

shun ʃʌn v Expel from a com­mu­ni­ty or group: ban­ish, black­ball, cast out, ostracise, ostra­cize, ban

wreck rɛk n A per­son of ruined health; some­one in bad shape phys­i­cal­ly or men­tal­ly: derelict, ruins

incip­i­ent ɪnˈsɪpiənt adj Begin­ning to exist: begin­ning, start­ing, developing