Jules Verne's Projectile Passengers Stunned After Lunar Launch — Italian Edition
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Jules Verne's Projectile Passengers Stunned After Lunar Launch — Italian Edition

Verne eerily predicted human spaceflight but imagined it inside a giant cannon shell — the g-forces alone would have been instantly lethal, as NASA later confirmed. Here, characters Ardan and Nicholl tend to the bloodied, unconscious Barbicane, president of the Gun Club, after the violent launch of their lunar projectile. The padded interior, emergency lamp, and crumpled figures capture the visceral human cost Verne acknowledged even in his optimistic space-travel fantasy. A masterwork of Victorian scientific adventure illustration.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Émile-Antoine Bayard
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: Italy
Coolness: 4/10

This is classic hard SF adjacent — Verne's scientifically grounded (if fatally flawed) space travel vision rendered with Victorian restraint. The drama is human and intimate rather than lurid, more scientific romance than space opera.

Text in image:

LA PRIMA MEZZ'ORA 15 Ciò detto, Ardan e Nicholl sollevarono il presidente del Club-Cannone e lo deposero sul divano. Barbicane pareva aver sofferto più dei suoi compagni. Era insanguinato, ma

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