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Hector Servadac Defies Gravity — Jules Verne Victorian Engraving 1877
Drawn directly from Jules Verne's 1877 novel 'Hector Servadac' (Off on a Comet), this engraving captures the story's central scientific wonder: after a comet grazes Earth, survivors experience dramatically reduced gravity. A uniformed French officer — the eponymous Captain Servadac — floats upward while his companion Ben-Zouf reaches out in astonishment. The tropical vegetation and open horizon suggest the comet's strange new world, rendered in precise Victorian woodblock engraving style characteristic of Verne's original Hetzel editions.
Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Édouard Riou
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 4/10
No ray-guns, no monsters — just one man cheerfully floating off a comet while his friend tries to keep him grounded. Verne's quiet surrealism hits harder than a rocket blast.
Tags:
explorationalien-worldsmad-sciencefloating figureFrench military officergravity anomalycompanion figuretropical landscapeVictorian clothingcomet worldJules VerneHector ServadacOff on a Cometreduced gravityHetzelVictorian science fictionFrench officerwoodblock engraving19th century sci-ficometantigravityÉdouard Riou





