
Henrique Alvim Corrêa's Martian Tripod Over Flooded Thames, War of the Worlds 1906
Dread saturates every stroke of this haunting pen-and-ink masterpiece — a towering Martian tripod looms over a flooded, gaslit London street, its saucer-shaped hood catching an eerie, unearthly glow against a turbulent sky. The Thames has swallowed the embankment, lamposts rising like tombstones from the dark water. The scene is utterly desolate, humanity absent, civilization silently submerged — a perfect visual metaphor for Wells's vision of mankind's humiliation before an unstoppable alien intelligence.
The most chilling detail is the complete absence of human figures — London's grandeur is utterly swallowed by floodwater and alien shadow, making the towering Martian machine feel all the more omnipotent and unstoppable.
“A Martian machine over the flooding Thames.”





