Warwick Goble's Serpentine Martian Tripod, War of the Worlds 1897
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Warwick Goble's Serpentine Martian Tripod, War of the Worlds 1897

In the chaos of Martian invasion, a desperate human figure clings to a sheer cliff face, scrambling upward in sheer terror as one of H.G. Wells' monstrous tripod war machines looms below, its articulated mechanical legs and tentacled undercarriage coiling like a living serpent. Warwick Goble's sepia-toned ink wash renders the moment with raw, visceral urgency — a lone human utterly dwarfed by the mechanical horror of the Martian conquerors in this landmark early science fiction illustration.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Warwick Goble
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1890s
Country: United Kingdom
Coolness: 6/10

Man versus machine at the edge of a cliff — and the machine doesn't blink! Goble's haunting ink wash captures the Martian apocalypse at its most personal and terrifying.

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