
Lunar Explosion — Jules Verne's 'Autour de la Lune' 1870 Engraving
From Jules Verne's 'Autour de la Lune' (Around the Moon), this masterful wood engraving depicts a cataclysmic explosion in deep space — likely the detonation of the projectile or a meteor strike — rendered with radiating light rays, billowing gas clouds, and tumbling debris fragments against a star-flecked void. The cross-hatched darkness of space is pierced by a blinding central burst, scattering rock and energy in every direction. A secondary smaller explosion flares lower left, amplifying the cosmic drama. Characteristic of Émile Bayard or Henri de Montaut's illustrations for Hetzel editions of Verne.
This engraving detonates somewhere between 'exploding space station' and 'runaway comet impact' — the radiating blast lines, secondary explosion, and cascading debris create an almost overwhelming sense of cosmic violence. For a Victorian book illustration, it cranks the spectacle dial impressively high.





