
Warwick Goble's Martian Encounter – War of the Worlds 1897
Subverting the grandiose spectacle typical of alien-invasion imagery, this quietly unsettling Victorian illustration depicts a lone, semi-nude man crouching in a shallow waterway amid reeds, his expression taut with primal fear or desperate concealment. The muted sepia and olive tones evoke a world already diminished — civilization stripped away, humanity reduced to animal survival. As one of Warwick Goble's original illustrations for H.G. Wells' serialized War of the Worlds, it masterfully conveys vulnerability against an implied, unseen Martian threat.
The drama is psychological rather than visceral — the terror is implied rather than shown. Goble packs survival dread into a single figure, but the restrained Victorian palette and quiet composition work against pulp bombast.





