Flyvefisken »Prometheus« (En Fremtidsfantasi) by Vilhelm Bergsøe
Published in 1870, Vilhelm Bergsøe's Flyvefisken "Prometheus" is a fascinating piece of early science fiction that feels surprisingly modern in its concerns. The story follows Professor Sander, a reclusive inventor in Copenhagen who has, in secret, perfected a submarine vessel. His creation, the 'Prometheus,' is years ahead of its time. The plot is set in motion when naval authorities, tipped off about the invention, demand a demonstration.
The Story
Sander, burdened by the memory of a fatal accident during earlier experiments, is deeply reluctant. He's forced to take a committee of officials and journalists on a dive in the Øresund strait. What begins as a technical showcase quickly becomes a tense, claustrophobic drama. A violent storm erupts on the surface, sinking a ship. Suddenly, the 'Prometheus' is no longer a curiosity—it's the only hope for survivors trapped in a sunken wreck. The crew must navigate treacherous currents, failing equipment, and their own rising panic in a race against time and suffocation. The real conflict isn't with sea monsters, but with physics, psychology, and the crushing pressure of the deep.
Why You Should Read It
What grabbed me wasn't the tech (though it's cool for its time), but the atmosphere. Bergsøe, a scientist himself, makes the submarine feel real—the smell of oil, the glow of electric lights, the eerie silence. Professor Sander is a great, flawed hero. He's not a daring explorer; he's a guilt-ridden man trying to prove his life's work has meaning beyond tragedy. The book is a slow burn, building dread not with action, but with the quiet horror of being trapped in a metal tube at the bottom of the sea. It's a story about responsibility, redemption, and the price of innovation.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect pick for readers who love classic sci-fi but want something different from the usual space operas or steampunk adventures. It's for anyone who enjoys a psychological, character-driven story set against a backdrop of genuine scientific speculation. If you liked the tense, underwater sections of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea but wished for more focus on the human cost of invention, you'll find a lot to love here. It's a short, gripping, and oddly poignant dive into the past's vision of the future.
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