Jules Verne's Lunar Projectile Passes the Moon — From the Earth to the Moon, 1865 — art by Émile-Antoine Bayard — From the Earth to the Moon / Around the Moon — 1860s
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Jules Verne's Lunar Projectile Passes the Moon — From the Earth to the Moon, 1865

Drawn directly from Jules Verne's landmark 1865 novel 'From the Earth to the Moon' and its sequel 'Around the Moon,' this masterful wood engraving captures the Columbiad shell-projectile dwarfed against a crescent-lit Moon in the star-scattered void. The bullet-shaped capsule carrying Barbicane, Nicholl, and Ardan skims past the terminator line of a cratered, dramatically shaded lunar surface — humanity's first fictional spacecraft rendered with breathtaking astronomical realism for a Victorian readership hungry for scientific romance.

Source: Wikimedia Commons
Decade: 1860s
Country: France
Coolness: 4/10

No bug-eyed monsters, no ray-guns — just cold vacuum and the awe of a tiny bullet sailing past the Moon. Understated genius that launched a thousand pulps.

Public domain. This vintage illustration is free of known copyright restrictions — free to download, share, and reuse for any purpose.

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