
Jules Verne 'Le Chemin de France' Hetzel 1887 — Soldiers Confront Fugitives
This 1887 Hetzel engraving from Jules Verne's adventure novel Le Chemin de France predicts nothing of future technology — but Verne's genius lay in anticipating exactly how chaotic and brutal human conflict would remain regardless of progress. A large, wild-eyed man recoils or grapples in a torchlit doorway, confronted by uniformed soldiers with drawn weapons, while a crumpled figure lies at his feet — a scene of raw wartime desperation rendered in Roux's masterfully expressive cross-hatched line work.
This is classic Vernian adventure fiction illustration — dramatic, historically grounded, and tense rather than fantastical. It represents the proto-pulp adventure genre that directly seeded later science fiction pulp conventions, favoring human peril and military confrontation over speculative technology.
“G. Roux”





