
Jules Verne's Around the Moon — Passengers Buffeted Atop the Projectile
Two men are violently tossed about on the rim of a cylindrical space projectile hurtling through the moonlit night sky, arms flung wide in desperate struggle. A top hat spins away into the void as a third figure clings to the railing below. This dramatic wood engraving captures a pivotal scene from Jules Verne's 'Autour de la Lune,' blending scientific wonder with visceral human peril — the moon itself glowing ominously behind storm clouds as mankind's first lunar voyagers fight for their lives.
Restrained by Victorian engraving conventions but bursting with kinetic drama — those windswept figures clinging to a bullet-shaped spacecraft are pure proto-pulp spectacle. Verne's illustrators invented the visual grammar that Frank R. Paul would later explode into full technicolor glory.





