
Frankenstein's Creature Awakens — Original 1831 Colburn & Bentley Frontispiece
A reader in 1831 would have recoiled in genuine horror: here, by the glimmer of a half-extinguished lamp, the yellow-eyed creature of Victor Frankenstein convulses to life on a cold stone floor, surrounded by a skull and open tome, while its creator — lantern in hand — flees in terror through a Gothic-arched doorway. This steel engraving by W. Chevalier after T. Holst is the definitive first visual interpretation of Mary Shelley's monster, raw, muscular, and deeply unsettling.
This belongs firmly in a museum — it is the ur-text of mad-science horror imagery, predating pulp by nearly a century. Yet the raw dramatic composition and visceral monster-awakening scene carry genuine visual shock that every pulp illustrator after it was consciously or unconsciously echoing.
“T. Holst, del. W. Chevalier, sculp. FRANKENSTEIN "By the glimmer of the half-extinguished light, I saw the dull, yellow eyes of the creature open; it breathed hard, and a convulsive motion agitated its limbs. *** I rushed out of the room." Page 43. London, Published by H. Colburn and R. Bentley, 1831.”





