
Martians Wade Ashore — Henrique Alvim Corrêa War of the Worlds, 1906
Two crouching human figures cling to a rocky shoreline amid dense coral-like sea vegetation, their desperate posture suggesting helpless hiding rather than escape. In the distance, a towering tripod war machine strides across the horizon beneath an umbrella-shaped hood, with a second machine visible further back. The vertical strut of a third looms ominously at right. This engraving, likely by de Neuville or Édouard Riou for Verne's 'Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea,' captures the alien sublime of an underwater world transformed into spectacle.
The vision of menacing tripod silhouettes looming over cowering figures in an alien seascape is genuinely eerie and imaginative. The restrained engraving style undercuts raw pulp energy but the conceptual ambition — vast machine intelligence versus fragile humanity — is striking.





