
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea – Chapter 1 Title Page, Hildibrand 1870s
A commanding figure stands atop a partially surfaced submarine vessel, gesturing dramatically toward the open sea as a panicked crowd surges along the shoreline behind him — the mysterious Nautilus has arrived. This is the electrifying opening scene of Jules Verne's oceanic masterwork, the chapter titled 'Un Écueil Fuyant' (A Fleeing Reef). Sailing ships loom in the misty background as seabirds scatter, and the chapter title curls through the sky in impossibly stylized letterforms, fusing art and text into a single thrilling declaration.
The title text literally snakes through the sky like living typography — Verne's publisher Hetzel knew how to make an entrance. Not pure pulp madness, but this is the granddaddy of undersea adventure art and absolutely drips with 19th-century spectacle.
“VINGT MILLE LIEUES SOUS LES MERS TOUR DU MONDE SOUS MARIN CHAPITRE PREMIER UN ÉCUEIL FUYANT. HILDIBRAND”





