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Jules Verne's Clock-Covered Laboratory — Victorian Wood Engraving, 1870s
Inside a Victorian inventor's obsessive sanctum, two gentlemen in riding clothes examine an open mechanical apparatus — perhaps a telegraph or phonographic device — while every inch of the surrounding walls bristles with clocks, gauges, barometers, and precision instruments. The scene pulses with mad-science energy: this is a world where time itself is being tamed. The cramped, instrument-choked interior is quintessential Jules Verne — rational obsession rendered as visual spectacle, where science and eccentricity share the same cluttered room.
Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Édouard Riou or Léon Benett
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 3/10
No rockets or ray-guns, but every clock on that wall is ticking toward something dangerous — this inventor's study is where the future gets invented, one obsessive gadget at a time.
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Text in image:
“VIL D'GRAND”





