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Jules Verne's Lunar Projectile in Space — De la Terre à la Lune Engraving
Drawn directly from Jules Verne's 'From the Earth to the Moon' (1865) and its sequel 'Around the Moon' (1870), this masterful wood engraving depicts the bullet-shaped aluminum projectile tumbling through star-filled space with the cratered Moon looming in the upper right. The conical capsule — complete with observation windows and a padded base — carries three men and two dogs on humanity's first imagined voyage beyond Earth. A small floating figure or debris drifts to the right, suggesting the harrowing weightlessness Verne described with scientific precision.
Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Émile-Antoine Bayard
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 4/10
No ray guns, no monsters — just cold hard science and one very cramped aluminum bullet. Verne kept it classy, but the void is still terrifying.
Tags:
space-travelexplorationretro-futurismrocketslunar projectilespace capsuleMoonstarszero gravityVictorian spacecraftcratersdeep spaceJules VerneFrom the Earth to the MoonAround the MoonVictorian science fictionlunar voyageHetzelwood engraving19th century sci-fispace capsuleMoonFrench illustrationBayard





