
Jules Verne 'Face au Drapeau' — L. Benett Frontispiece, 1896
Before you stands a masterwork of Victorian scientific adventure illustration: the frontispiece to Jules Verne's 1896 novel 'Face au Drapeau' (For the Flag), depicting a dramatic scene in which a figure operates what appears to be a weapon or optical instrument on a tripod amid rocky terrain, while uniformed sailors and a warship loom in the smoke-filled background. The tension between civilian scientist and military force — the central conflict of Verne's tale of a stolen superweapon — is rendered with taut, cinematic urgency.
The illustration is accomplished and purposeful, with genuine dramatic staging, but remains restrained within the genteel conventions of Hetzel's Voyages Extraordinaires series. The spectacle is implied rather than explosive — classic Verne tension, not lurid pulp excess.
“JULES VERNE FACE AU DRAPEAU”





