
Londoners Examine Defeated Martian War Machines – Corrêa, 1906
Eerily prescient in depicting mechanized warfare's aftermath, this illustration predates WWI tank graveyards by a decade — though the alien tripods look more like industrial cranes than combat machines. Henrique Alvim Corrêa's meticulous pen-and-ink scene depicts Victorian Londoners swarming a flooded urban street, clambering over the collapsed wreckage of H.G. Wells' Martian war machines. Toppled tripods, spherical pods, and tangled support scaffolding litter the scene while curious crowds document humanity's improbable victory through bacteria.
This is sophisticated literary science fiction illustration rather than lurid pulp — closer to hard SF speculation in the Jules Verne tradition, depicting alien invasion with documentary realism. The drama is subdued and journalistic, lending the scene an almost ethnographic quality that distinguishes Corrêa's work from later pulp sensationalism.
“Londoners examine the dead Martians' machines.”





