
Warwick Goble's Martian Tripods Wade Through Smoke, War of the Worlds
Billowing sepia smoke dominates the composition as two towering Martian fighting machines wade through a churning, hissing inferno, their tentacled bodies and mechanical cowls silhouetted against an eerie pale sky. Warwick Goble's fluid pen-and-ink draftsmanship renders the heat-ray's devastation with smoky organic dynamism, the machines looming with terrifying scale from the upper-right corner. The caption anchors the horror in H.G. Wells' prose, making this one of the earliest and most atmospheric visualizations of Martian invasion ever committed to print.
Goble packs existential dread into every swirling tendril of smoke, with the Martian machines looming like mechanical gods descending into apocalyptic haze. The imagination-per-square-inch ratio is exceptional for its era — this is Victorian sci-fi horror rendered with visceral, almost expressionist intensity.
“And through this two Martians slowly waded and turned their hissing jets this way and that.”





