
Weightless Man Dancing in Space — Verne's 'Around the Moon' Italian Edition
A star-speckled black void frames a jubilant Victorian gentleman suspended weightlessly in space, his coat-tails and cravat streaming as he dances atop a small celestial body, arms raised in exuberant triumph. Executed in fine cross-hatched engraving, the image captures the giddy comedy of zero-gravity with theatrical flair — a 19th-century dandy utterly delighted by the impossible physics of lunar orbit, radiating the optimistic wonder that defined Verne's scientific romances.
Charmingly whimsical rather than breathlessly sensational, the image earns its points through sheer conceptual novelty — a smiling Victorian in a waistcoat defying gravity among the stars. It's imagination delivered with genteel restraint, more Jules Verne parlor-science than screaming pulp headline.
“66 INTORNO ALLA LUNA. « Mi viene un'idea, diss'egli; sta bene che noi andiamo nel mondo della Luna, ma come faremo a ritornare? I suoi due interlocutori si guardarono in volto meravi-”





