
Henrique Alvim Corrêa: Curate Unconscious, War of the Worlds 1906
At the dawn of the 20th century, H.G. Wells crystallized humanity's deepest colonial anxieties by inverting them — making mankind the prey. This haunting sepia illustration by Henrique Alvim Corrêa captures the narrator and the broken curate collapsed on a scullery floor beneath the crushing weight of a Martian fighting machine, its sinuous tentacles coiling nearby. The composition radiates claustrophobic dread, the harsh diagonal light suggesting an alien world pressing down on a helpless civilization, stripped of faith and reason.
Corrêa's work predates pulp conventions but shares their visceral dramatic staging and alien menace. The restrained, literary pen-and-ink technique keeps it from full pulp hysteria, but the coiling tentacles and collapsed human figures carry genuine horror energy.
“The curate lies unconscious on the scullery floor.”





