Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea – Corridor Aboard the Nautilus, 1871
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Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea – Corridor Aboard the Nautilus, 1871

Deep beneath the ocean's surface, two figures move through the riveted iron corridors of Captain Nemo's legendary submarine, the Nautilus. One man leans pensively against the bolted wall, hand raised to his face in quiet contemplation, while a second disappears through a heavy watertight doorway ahead. The claustrophobic geometry of the submarine's interior — studded metal panels, low arched ceiling, circular overhead portlight — conveys the oppressive grandeur of Jules Verne's undersea world with masterful cross-hatched engraving.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Alphonse de Neuville / Édouard Riou
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 3/10

No monsters, no mayhem — just two men and 20,000 leagues of cold dark ocean between them and daylight. The dread is all in the rivets.

Text in image:

Adol

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