
Warwick Goble's Martian Tripods Stalking Seaward – War of the Worlds 1897
Tentacled, insectoid fighting-machines lean at violent angles as they wade into shallow coastal waters, their spindly lattice-work legs cutting through the tide like mechanical herons. Warwick Goble's stark sepia ink work captures H.G. Wells's Martian tripods in full retreat — or pursuit — toward the sea, smoke curling from their hoods against a pale sky. The composition tilts with unsettling momentum, three war machines converging on the horizon in a procession of inevitable, alien purpose.
Goble's vision of the Martian machines wading en masse into the sea is one of the most eerily purposeful images in early science fiction illustration — the diagonal composition and tentacled silhouettes convey alien inevitability with remarkable economy. The ambition to render mechanical extraterrestrial conquest in pure ink without color is bold and wholly successful.
“They were all stalking seaward.”





