<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/cover.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="cover " /><br/><br/></div>
<h1>The War of the Worlds</h1>
<h2 class="no-break">by H. G. Wells</h2>
<hr />
<p class="poem">
‘But who shall dwell in these worlds if they be inhabited?<br/>
. . . Are we or they Lords of the World? . . . And<br/>
how are all things made for man?’<br/>
KEPLER (quoted in <i>The Anatomy of Melancholy</i>)<br/></p>
<h2>Contents</h2>
<table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#book01"><b>BOOK ONE.—THE COMING OF THE MARTIANS</b></SPAN><br/><br/></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap01">I. THE EVE OF THE WAR.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap02">II. THE FALLING STAR.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap03">III. ON HORSELL COMMON.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap04">IV. THE CYLINDER OPENS.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap05">V. THE HEAT-RAY.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap06">VI. THE HEAT-RAY IN THE CHOBHAM ROAD.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap07">VII. HOW I REACHED HOME.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap08">VIII. FRIDAY NIGHT.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap09">IX. THE FIGHTING BEGINS.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap10">X. IN THE STORM.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap11">XI. AT THE WINDOW.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap12">XII. WHAT I SAW OF THE DESTRUCTION OF WEYBRIDGE AND SHEPPERTON.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap13">XIII. HOW I FELL IN WITH THE CURATE.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap14">XIV. IN LONDON.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap15">XV. WHAT HAD HAPPENED IN SURREY.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap16">XVI. THE EXODUS FROM LONDON.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap17">XVII. THE “THUNDER CHILD”.</SPAN><br/><br/></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#book02"><b>BOOK TWO.—THE EARTH UNDER THE MARTIANS</b></SPAN><br/><br/></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap18">I. UNDER FOOT.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap19">II. WHAT WE SAW FROM THE RUINED HOUSE.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap20">III. THE DAYS OF IMPRISONMENT.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap21">IV. THE DEATH OF THE CURATE.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap22">V. THE STILLNESS.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap23">VI. THE WORK OF FIFTEEN DAYS.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap24">VII. THE MAN ON PUTNEY HILL.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap25">VIII. DEAD LONDON.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap26">IX. WRECKAGE.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap27">X. THE EPILOGUE.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<h2><SPAN name="book01"></SPAN>BOOK ONE<br/> THE COMING OF THE MARTIANS</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>I.<br/> THE EVE OF THE WAR.</h2>
<p>No one would have believed in the last years of the nineteenth century that
this world was being watched keenly and closely by intelligences greater than
man’s and yet as mortal as his own; that as men busied themselves about
their various concerns they were scrutinised and studied, perhaps almost as
narrowly as a man with a microscope might scrutinise the transient creatures
that swarm and multiply in a drop of water. With infinite complacency men went
to and fro over this globe about their little affairs, serene in their
assurance of their empire over matter. It is possible that the infusoria under
the microscope do the same. No one gave a thought to the older worlds of space
as sources of human danger, or thought of them only to dismiss the idea of life
upon them as impossible or improbable. It is curious to recall some of the
mental habits of those departed days. At most terrestrial men fancied there
might be other men upon Mars, perhaps inferior to themselves and ready to
welcome a missionary enterprise. Yet across the gulf of space, minds that are
to our minds as ours are to those of the beasts that perish, intellects vast
and cool and unsympathetic, regarded this earth with envious eyes, and slowly
and surely drew their plans against us. And early in the twentieth century came
the great disillusionment.</p>
<p>The planet Mars, I scarcely need remind the reader, revolves about the sun at a
mean distance of 140,000,000 miles, and the light and heat it receives from the
sun is barely half of that received by this world. It must be, if the nebular
hypothesis has any truth, older than our world; and long before this earth
ceased to be molten, life upon its surface must have begun its course. The fact
that it is scarcely one seventh of the volume of the earth must have
accelerated its cooling to the temperature at which life could begin. It has
air and water and all that is necessary for the support of animated existence.</p>
<p>Yet so vain is man, and so blinded by his vanity, that no writer, up to the
very end of the nineteenth century, expressed any idea that intelligent life
might have developed there far, or indeed at all, beyond its earthly level. Nor
was it generally understood that since Mars is older than our earth, with
scarcely a quarter of the superficial area and remoter from the sun, it
necessarily follows that it is not only more distant from time’s
beginning but nearer its end.</p>
<p>The secular cooling that must someday overtake our planet has already gone far
indeed with our neighbour. Its physical condition is still largely a mystery,
but we know now that even in its equatorial region the midday temperature
barely approaches that of our coldest winter. Its air is much more attenuated
than ours, its oceans have shrunk until they cover but a third of its surface,
and as its slow seasons change huge snowcaps gather and melt about either pole
and periodically inundate its temperate zones. That last stage of exhaustion,
which to us is still incredibly remote, has become a present-day problem for
the inhabitants of Mars. The immediate pressure of necessity has brightened
their intellects, enlarged their powers, and hardened their hearts. And looking
across space with instruments, and intelligences such as we have scarcely
dreamed of, they see, at its nearest distance only 35,000,000 of miles sunward
of them, a morning star of hope, our own warmer planet, green with vegetation
and grey with water, with a cloudy atmosphere eloquent of fertility, with
glimpses through its drifting cloud wisps of broad stretches of populous
country and narrow, navy-crowded seas.</p>
<p>And we men, the creatures who inhabit this earth, must be to them at least as
alien and lowly as are the monkeys and lemurs to us. The intellectual side of
man already admits that life is an incessant struggle for existence, and it
would seem that this too is the belief of the minds upon Mars. Their world is
far gone in its cooling and this world is still crowded with life, but crowded
only with what they regard as inferior animals. To carry warfare sunward is,
indeed, their only escape from the destruction that, generation after
generation, creeps upon them.</p>
<p>And before we judge of them too harshly we must remember what ruthless and
utter destruction our own species has wrought, not only upon animals, such as
the vanished bison and the dodo, but upon its inferior races. The Tasmanians,
in spite of their human likeness, were entirely swept out of existence in a war
of extermination waged by European immigrants, in the space of fifty years. Are
we such apostles of mercy as to complain if the Martians warred in the same
spirit?</p>
<p>The Martians seem to have calculated their descent with amazing
subtlety—their mathematical learning is evidently far in excess of
ours—and to have carried out their preparations with a well-nigh perfect
unanimity. Had our instruments permitted it, we might have seen the gathering
trouble far back in the nineteenth century. Men like Schiaparelli watched the
red planet—it is odd, by-the-bye, that for countless centuries Mars has
been the star of war—but failed to interpret the fluctuating appearances
of the markings they mapped so well. All that time the Martians must have been
getting ready.</p>
<p>During the opposition of 1894 a great light was seen on the illuminated part of
the disk, first at the Lick Observatory, then by Perrotin of Nice, and then by
other observers. English readers heard of it first in the issue of
<i>Nature</i> dated August 2. I am inclined to think that this blaze may have
been the casting of the huge gun, in the vast pit sunk into their planet, from
which their shots were fired at us. Peculiar markings, as yet unexplained, were
seen near the site of that outbreak during the next two oppositions.</p>
<p>The storm burst upon us six years ago now. As Mars approached opposition,
Lavelle of Java set the wires of the astronomical exchange palpitating with the
amazing intelligence of a huge outbreak of incandescent gas upon the planet. It
had occurred towards midnight of the twelfth; and the spectroscope, to which he
had at once resorted, indicated a mass of flaming gas, chiefly hydrogen, moving
with an enormous velocity towards this earth. This jet of fire had become
invisible about a quarter past twelve. He compared it to a colossal puff of
flame suddenly and violently squirted out of the planet, “as flaming
gases rushed out of a gun.”</p>
<p>A singularly appropriate phrase it proved. Yet the next day there was nothing
of this in the papers except a little note in the <i>Daily Telegraph</i>, and
the world went in ignorance of one of the gravest dangers that ever threatened
the human race. I might not have heard of the eruption at all had I not met
Ogilvy, the well-known astronomer, at Ottershaw. He was immensely excited at
the news, and in the excess of his feelings invited me up to take a turn with
him that night in a scrutiny of the red planet.</p>
<p>In spite of all that has happened since, I still remember that vigil very
distinctly: the black and silent observatory, the shadowed lantern throwing a
feeble glow upon the floor in the corner, the steady ticking of the clockwork
of the telescope, the little slit in the roof—an oblong profundity with
the stardust streaked across it. Ogilvy moved about, invisible but audible.
Looking through the telescope, one saw a circle of deep blue and the little
round planet swimming in the field. It seemed such a little thing, so bright
and small and still, faintly marked with transverse stripes, and slightly
flattened from the perfect round. But so little it was, so silvery warm—a
pin’s head of light! It was as if it quivered, but really this was the
telescope vibrating with the activity of the clockwork that kept the planet in
view.</p>
<p>As I watched, the planet seemed to grow larger and smaller and to advance and
recede, but that was simply that my eye was tired. Forty millions of miles it
was from us—more than forty millions of miles of void. Few people realise
the immensity of vacancy in which the dust of the material universe swims.</p>
<p>Near it in the field, I remember, were three faint points of light, three
telescopic stars infinitely remote, and all around it was the unfathomable
darkness of empty space. You know how that blackness looks on a frosty
starlight night. In a telescope it seems far profounder. And invisible to me
because it was so remote and small, flying swiftly and steadily towards me
across that incredible distance, drawing nearer every minute by so many
thousands of miles, came the Thing they were sending us, the Thing that was to
bring so much struggle and calamity and death to the earth. I never dreamed of
it then as I watched; no one on earth dreamed of that unerring missile.</p>
<p>That night, too, there was another jetting out of gas from the distant planet.
I saw it. A reddish flash at the edge, the slightest projection of the outline
just as the chronometer struck midnight; and at that I told Ogilvy and he took
my place. The night was warm and I was thirsty, and I went stretching my legs
clumsily and feeling my way in the darkness, to the little table where the
siphon stood, while Ogilvy exclaimed at the streamer of gas that came out
towards us.</p>
<p>That night another invisible missile started on its way to the earth from Mars,
just a second or so under twenty-four hours after the first one. I remember how
I sat on the table there in the blackness, with patches of green and crimson
swimming before my eyes. I wished I had a light to smoke by, little suspecting
the meaning of the minute gleam I had seen and all that it would presently
bring me. Ogilvy watched till one, and then gave it up; and we lit the lantern
and walked over to his house. Down below in the darkness were Ottershaw and
Chertsey and all their hundreds of people, sleeping in peace.</p>
<p>He was full of speculation that night about the condition of Mars, and scoffed
at the vulgar idea of its having inhabitants who were signalling us. His idea
was that meteorites might be falling in a heavy shower upon the planet, or that
a huge volcanic explosion was in progress. He pointed out to me how unlikely it
was that organic evolution had taken the same direction in the two adjacent
planets.</p>
<p>“The chances against anything manlike on Mars are a million to
one,” he said.</p>
<p>Hundreds of observers saw the flame that night and the night after about
midnight, and again the night after; and so for ten nights, a flame each night.
Why the shots ceased after the tenth no one on earth has attempted to explain.
It may be the gases of the firing caused the Martians inconvenience. Dense
clouds of smoke or dust, visible through a powerful telescope on earth as
little grey, fluctuating patches, spread through the clearness of the
planet’s atmosphere and obscured its more familiar features.</p>
<p>Even the daily papers woke up to the disturbances at last, and popular notes
appeared here, there, and everywhere concerning the volcanoes upon Mars. The
seriocomic periodical <i>Punch</i>, I remember, made a happy use of it in the
political cartoon. And, all unsuspected, those missiles the Martians had fired
at us drew earthward, rushing now at a pace of many miles a second through the
empty gulf of space, hour by hour and day by day, nearer and nearer. It seems
to me now almost incredibly wonderful that, with that swift fate hanging over
us, men could go about their petty concerns as they did. I remember how
jubilant Markham was at securing a new photograph of the planet for the
illustrated paper he edited in those days. People in these latter times
scarcely realise the abundance and enterprise of our nineteenth-century papers.
For my own part, I was much occupied in learning to ride the bicycle, and busy
upon a series of papers discussing the probable developments of moral ideas as
civilisation progressed.</p>
<p>One night (the first missile then could scarcely have been 10,000,000 miles
away) I went for a walk with my wife. It was starlight and I explained the
Signs of the Zodiac to her, and pointed out Mars, a bright dot of light
creeping zenithward, towards which so many telescopes were pointed. It was a
warm night. Coming home, a party of excursionists from Chertsey or Isleworth
passed us singing and playing music. There were lights in the upper windows of
the houses as the people went to bed. From the railway station in the distance
came the sound of shunting trains, ringing and rumbling, softened almost into
melody by the distance. My wife pointed out to me the brightness of the red,
green, and yellow signal lights hanging in a framework against the sky. It
seemed so safe and tranquil.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>II.<br/> THE FALLING STAR.</h2>
<p>Then came the night of the first falling star. It was seen early in the
morning, rushing over Winchester eastward, a line of flame high in the
atmosphere. Hundreds must have seen it, and taken it for an ordinary falling
star. Albin described it as leaving a greenish streak behind it that glowed for
some seconds. Denning, our greatest authority on meteorites, stated that the
height of its first appearance was about ninety or one hundred miles. It seemed
to him that it fell to earth about one hundred miles east of him.</p>
<p>I was at home at that hour and writing in my study; and although my French
windows face towards Ottershaw and the blind was up (for I loved in those days
to look up at the night sky), I saw nothing of it. Yet this strangest of all
things that ever came to earth from outer space must have fallen while I was
sitting there, visible to me had I only looked up as it passed. Some of those
who saw its flight say it travelled with a hissing sound. I myself heard
nothing of that. Many people in Berkshire, Surrey, and Middlesex must have seen
the fall of it, and, at most, have thought that another meteorite had
descended. No one seems to have troubled to look for the fallen mass that
night.</p>
<p>But very early in the morning poor Ogilvy, who had seen the shooting star and
who was persuaded that a meteorite lay somewhere on the common between Horsell,
Ottershaw, and Woking, rose early with the idea of finding it. Find it he did,
soon after dawn, and not far from the sand-pits. An enormous hole had been made
by the impact of the projectile, and the sand and gravel had been flung
violently in every direction over the heath, forming heaps visible a mile and a
half away. The heather was on fire eastward, and a thin blue smoke rose against
the dawn.</p>
<p>The Thing itself lay almost entirely buried in sand, amidst the scattered
splinters of a fir tree it had shivered to fragments in its descent. The
uncovered part had the appearance of a huge cylinder, caked over and its
outline softened by a thick scaly dun-coloured incrustation. It had a diameter
of about thirty yards. He approached the mass, surprised at the size and more
so at the shape, since most meteorites are rounded more or less completely. It
was, however, still so hot from its flight through the air as to forbid his
near approach. A stirring noise within its cylinder he ascribed to the unequal
cooling of its surface; for at that time it had not occurred to him that it
might be hollow.</p>
<p>He remained standing at the edge of the pit that the Thing had made for itself,
staring at its strange appearance, astonished chiefly at its unusual shape and
colour, and dimly perceiving even then some evidence of design in its arrival.
The early morning was wonderfully still, and the sun, just clearing the pine
trees towards Weybridge, was already warm. He did not remember hearing any
birds that morning, there was certainly no breeze stirring, and the only sounds
were the faint movements from within the cindery cylinder. He was all alone on
the common.</p>
<p>Then suddenly he noticed with a start that some of the grey clinker, the ashy
incrustation that covered the meteorite, was falling off the circular edge of
the end. It was dropping off in flakes and raining down upon the sand. A large
piece suddenly came off and fell with a sharp noise that brought his heart into
his mouth.</p>
<p>For a minute he scarcely realised what this meant, and, although the heat was
excessive, he clambered down into the pit close to the bulk to see the Thing
more clearly. He fancied even then that the cooling of the body might account
for this, but what disturbed that idea was the fact that the ash was falling
only from the end of the cylinder.</p>
<p>And then he perceived that, very slowly, the circular top of the cylinder was
rotating on its body. It was such a gradual movement that he discovered it only
through noticing that a black mark that had been near him five minutes ago was
now at the other side of the circumference. Even then he scarcely understood
what this indicated, until he heard a muffled grating sound and saw the black
mark jerk forward an inch or so. Then the thing came upon him in a flash. The
cylinder was artificial—hollow—with an end that screwed out!
Something within the cylinder was unscrewing the top!</p>
<p>“Good heavens!” said Ogilvy. “There’s a man in
it—men in it! Half roasted to death! Trying to escape!”</p>
<p>At once, with a quick mental leap, he linked the Thing with the flash upon
Mars.</p>
<p>The thought of the confined creature was so dreadful to him that he forgot the
heat and went forward to the cylinder to help turn. But luckily the dull
radiation arrested him before he could burn his hands on the still-glowing
metal. At that he stood irresolute for a moment, then turned, scrambled out of
the pit, and set off running wildly into Woking. The time then must have been
somewhere about six o’clock. He met a waggoner and tried to make him
understand, but the tale he told and his appearance were so wild—his hat
had fallen off in the pit—that the man simply drove on. He was equally
unsuccessful with the potman who was just unlocking the doors of the
public-house by Horsell Bridge. The fellow thought he was a lunatic at large
and made an unsuccessful attempt to shut him into the taproom. That sobered him
a little; and when he saw Henderson, the London journalist, in his garden, he
called over the palings and made himself understood.</p>
<p>“Henderson,” he called, “you saw that shooting star last
night?”</p>
<p>“Well?” said Henderson.</p>
<p>“It’s out on Horsell Common now.”</p>
<p>“Good Lord!” said Henderson. “Fallen meteorite! That’s
good.”</p>
<p>“But it’s something more than a meteorite. It’s a
cylinder—an artificial cylinder, man! And there’s something
inside.”</p>
<p>Henderson stood up with his spade in his hand.</p>
<p>“What’s that?” he said. He was deaf in one ear.</p>
<p>Ogilvy told him all that he had seen. Henderson was a minute or so taking it
in. Then he dropped his spade, snatched up his jacket, and came out into the
road. The two men hurried back at once to the common, and found the cylinder
still lying in the same position. But now the sounds inside had ceased, and a
thin circle of bright metal showed between the top and the body of the
cylinder. Air was either entering or escaping at the rim with a thin, sizzling
sound.</p>
<p>They listened, rapped on the scaly burnt metal with a stick, and, meeting with
no response, they both concluded the man or men inside must be insensible or
dead.</p>
<p>Of course the two were quite unable to do anything. They shouted consolation
and promises, and went off back to the town again to get help. One can imagine
them, covered with sand, excited and disordered, running up the little street
in the bright sunlight just as the shop folks were taking down their shutters
and people were opening their bedroom windows. Henderson went into the railway
station at once, in order to telegraph the news to London. The newspaper
articles had prepared men’s minds for the reception of the idea.</p>
<p>By eight o’clock a number of boys and unemployed men had already started
for the common to see the “dead men from Mars.” That was the form
the story took. I heard of it first from my newspaper boy about a quarter to
nine when I went out to get my <i>Daily Chronicle</i>. I was naturally
startled, and lost no time in going out and across the Ottershaw bridge to the
sand-pits.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>III.<br/> ON HORSELL COMMON.</h2>
<p>I found a little crowd of perhaps twenty people surrounding the huge hole in
which the cylinder lay. I have already described the appearance of that
colossal bulk, embedded in the ground. The turf and gravel about it seemed
charred as if by a sudden explosion. No doubt its impact had caused a flash of
fire. Henderson and Ogilvy were not there. I think they perceived that nothing
was to be done for the present, and had gone away to breakfast at
Henderson’s house.</p>
<p>There were four or five boys sitting on the edge of the Pit, with their feet
dangling, and amusing themselves—until I stopped them—by throwing
stones at the giant mass. After I had spoken to them about it, they began
playing at “touch” in and out of the group of bystanders.</p>
<p>Among these were a couple of cyclists, a jobbing gardener I employed sometimes,
a girl carrying a baby, Gregg the butcher and his little boy, and two or three
loafers and golf caddies who were accustomed to hang about the railway station.
There was very little talking. Few of the common people in England had anything
but the vaguest astronomical ideas in those days. Most of them were staring
quietly at the big table like end of the cylinder, which was still as Ogilvy
and Henderson had left it. I fancy the popular expectation of a heap of charred
corpses was disappointed at this inanimate bulk. Some went away while I was
there, and other people came. I clambered into the pit and fancied I heard a
faint movement under my feet. The top had certainly ceased to rotate.</p>
<p>It was only when I got thus close to it that the strangeness of this object was
at all evident to me. At the first glance it was really no more exciting than
an overturned carriage or a tree blown across the road. Not so much so, indeed.
It looked like a rusty gas float. It required a certain amount of scientific
education to perceive that the grey scale of the Thing was no common oxide,
that the yellowish-white metal that gleamed in the crack between the lid and
the cylinder had an unfamiliar hue. “Extra-terrestrial” had no
meaning for most of the onlookers.</p>
<p>At that time it was quite clear in my own mind that the Thing had come from the
planet Mars, but I judged it improbable that it contained any living creature.
I thought the unscrewing might be automatic. In spite of Ogilvy, I still
believed that there were men in Mars. My mind ran fancifully on the
possibilities of its containing manuscript, on the difficulties in translation
that might arise, whether we should find coins and models in it, and so forth.
Yet it was a little too large for assurance on this idea. I felt an impatience
to see it opened. About eleven, as nothing seemed happening, I walked back,
full of such thought, to my home in Maybury. But I found it difficult to get to
work upon my abstract investigations.</p>
<p>In the afternoon the appearance of the common had altered very much. The early
editions of the evening papers had startled London with enormous headlines:</p>
<p class="center">
“A MESSAGE RECEIVED FROM MARS.”</p>
<p class="center">
“REMARKABLE STORY FROM WOKING,”</p>
<p>and so forth. In addition, Ogilvy’s wire to the Astronomical Exchange had
roused every observatory in the three kingdoms.</p>
<p>There were half a dozen flys or more from the Woking station standing in the
road by the sand-pits, a basket-chaise from Chobham, and a rather lordly
carriage. Besides that, there was quite a heap of bicycles. In addition, a
large number of people must have walked, in spite of the heat of the day, from
Woking and Chertsey, so that there was altogether quite a considerable
crowd—one or two gaily dressed ladies among the others.</p>
<p>It was glaringly hot, not a cloud in the sky nor a breath of wind, and the only
shadow was that of the few scattered pine trees. The burning heather had been
extinguished, but the level ground towards Ottershaw was blackened as far as
one could see, and still giving off vertical streamers of smoke. An
enterprising sweet-stuff dealer in the Chobham Road had sent up his son with a
barrow-load of green apples and ginger beer.</p>
<p>Going to the edge of the pit, I found it occupied by a group of about half a
dozen men—Henderson, Ogilvy, and a tall, fair-haired man that I
afterwards learned was Stent, the Astronomer Royal, with several workmen
wielding spades and pickaxes. Stent was giving directions in a clear,
high-pitched voice. He was standing on the cylinder, which was now evidently
much cooler; his face was crimson and streaming with perspiration, and
something seemed to have irritated him.</p>
<p>A large portion of the cylinder had been uncovered, though its lower end was
still embedded. As soon as Ogilvy saw me among the staring crowd on the edge of
the pit he called to me to come down, and asked me if I would mind going over
to see Lord Hilton, the lord of the manor.</p>
<p>The growing crowd, he said, was becoming a serious impediment to their
excavations, especially the boys. They wanted a light railing put up, and help
to keep the people back. He told me that a faint stirring was occasionally
still audible within the case, but that the workmen had failed to unscrew the
top, as it afforded no grip to them. The case appeared to be enormously thick,
and it was possible that the faint sounds we heard represented a noisy tumult
in the interior.</p>
<p>I was very glad to do as he asked, and so become one of the privileged
spectators within the contemplated enclosure. I failed to find Lord Hilton at
his house, but I was told he was expected from London by the six o’clock
train from Waterloo; and as it was then about a quarter past five, I went home,
had some tea, and walked up to the station to waylay him.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap04"></SPAN>IV.<br/> THE CYLINDER OPENS.</h2>
<p>When I returned to the common the sun was setting. Scattered groups were
hurrying from the direction of Woking, and one or two persons were returning.
The crowd about the pit had increased, and stood out black against the lemon
yellow of the sky—a couple of hundred people, perhaps. There were raised
voices, and some sort of struggle appeared to be going on about the pit.
Strange imaginings passed through my mind. As I drew nearer I heard
Stent’s voice:</p>
<p>“Keep back! Keep back!”</p>
<p>A boy came running towards me.</p>
<p>“It’s a-movin’,” he said to me as he passed;
“a-screwin’ and a-screwin’ out. I don’t like it.
I’m a-goin’ ’ome, I am.”</p>
<p>I went on to the crowd. There were really, I should think, two or three hundred
people elbowing and jostling one another, the one or two ladies there being by
no means the least active.</p>
<p>“He’s fallen in the pit!” cried some one.</p>
<p>“Keep back!” said several.</p>
<p>The crowd swayed a little, and I elbowed my way through. Every one seemed
greatly excited. I heard a peculiar humming sound from the pit.</p>
<p>“I say!” said Ogilvy; “help keep these idiots back. We
don’t know what’s in the confounded thing, you know!”</p>
<p>I saw a young man, a shop assistant in Woking I believe he was, standing on the
cylinder and trying to scramble out of the hole again. The crowd had pushed him
in.</p>
<p>The end of the cylinder was being screwed out from within. Nearly two feet of
shining screw projected. Somebody blundered against me, and I narrowly missed
being pitched onto the top of the screw. I turned, and as I did so the screw
must have come out, for the lid of the cylinder fell upon the gravel with a
ringing concussion. I stuck my elbow into the person behind me, and turned my
head towards the Thing again. For a moment that circular cavity seemed
perfectly black. I had the sunset in my eyes.</p>
<p>I think everyone expected to see a man emerge—possibly something a little
unlike us terrestrial men, but in all essentials a man. I know I did. But,
looking, I presently saw something stirring within the shadow: greyish billowy
movements, one above another, and then two luminous disks—like eyes. Then
something resembling a little grey snake, about the thickness of a walking
stick, coiled up out of the writhing middle, and wriggled in the air towards
me—and then another.</p>
<p>A sudden chill came over me. There was a loud shriek from a woman behind. I
half turned, keeping my eyes fixed upon the cylinder still, from which other
tentacles were now projecting, and began pushing my way back from the edge of
the pit. I saw astonishment giving place to horror on the faces of the people
about me. I heard inarticulate exclamations on all sides. There was a general
movement backwards. I saw the shopman struggling still on the edge of the pit.
I found myself alone, and saw the people on the other side of the pit running
off, Stent among them. I looked again at the cylinder, and ungovernable terror
gripped me. I stood petrified and staring.</p>
<p>A big greyish rounded bulk, the size, perhaps, of a bear, was rising slowly and
painfully out of the cylinder. As it bulged up and caught the light, it
glistened like wet leather.</p>
<p>Two large dark-coloured eyes were regarding me steadfastly. The mass that
framed them, the head of the thing, was rounded, and had, one might say, a
face. There was a mouth under the eyes, the lipless brim of which quivered and
panted, and dropped saliva. The whole creature heaved and pulsated
convulsively. A lank tentacular appendage gripped the edge of the cylinder,
another swayed in the air.</p>
<p>Those who have never seen a living Martian can scarcely imagine the strange
horror of its appearance. The peculiar V-shaped mouth with its pointed upper
lip, the absence of brow ridges, the absence of a chin beneath the wedgelike
lower lip, the incessant quivering of this mouth, the Gorgon groups of
tentacles, the tumultuous breathing of the lungs in a strange atmosphere, the
evident heaviness and painfulness of movement due to the greater gravitational
energy of the earth—above all, the extraordinary intensity of the immense
eyes—were at once vital, intense, inhuman, crippled and monstrous. There
was something fungoid in the oily brown skin, something in the clumsy
deliberation of the tedious movements unspeakably nasty. Even at this first
encounter, this first glimpse, I was overcome with disgust and dread.</p>
<p>Suddenly the monster vanished. It had toppled over the brim of the cylinder and
fallen into the pit, with a thud like the fall of a great mass of leather. I
heard it give a peculiar thick cry, and forthwith another of these creatures
appeared darkly in the deep shadow of the aperture.</p>
<p>I turned and, running madly, made for the first group of trees, perhaps a
hundred yards away; but I ran slantingly and stumbling, for I could not avert
my face from these things.</p>
<p>There, among some young pine trees and furze bushes, I stopped, panting, and
waited further developments. The common round the sand-pits was dotted with
people, standing like myself in a half-fascinated terror, staring at these
creatures, or rather at the heaped gravel at the edge of the pit in which they
lay. And then, with a renewed horror, I saw a round, black object bobbing up
and down on the edge of the pit. It was the head of the shopman who had fallen
in, but showing as a little black object against the hot western sun. Now he
got his shoulder and knee up, and again he seemed to slip back until only his
head was visible. Suddenly he vanished, and I could have fancied a faint shriek
had reached me. I had a momentary impulse to go back and help him that my fears
overruled.</p>
<p>Everything was then quite invisible, hidden by the deep pit and the heap of
sand that the fall of the cylinder had made. Anyone coming along the road from
Chobham or Woking would have been amazed at the sight—a dwindling
multitude of perhaps a hundred people or more standing in a great irregular
circle, in ditches, behind bushes, behind gates and hedges, saying little to
one another and that in short, excited shouts, and staring, staring hard at a
few heaps of sand. The barrow of ginger beer stood, a queer derelict, black
against the burning sky, and in the sand-pits was a row of deserted vehicles
with their horses feeding out of nosebags or pawing the ground.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN>V.<br/> THE HEAT-RAY.</h2>
<p>After the glimpse I had had of the Martians emerging from the cylinder in which
they had come to the earth from their planet, a kind of fascination paralysed
my actions. I remained standing knee-deep in the heather, staring at the mound
that hid them. I was a battleground of fear and curiosity.</p>
<p>I did not dare to go back towards the pit, but I felt a passionate longing to
peer into it. I began walking, therefore, in a big curve, seeking some point of
vantage and continually looking at the sand-heaps that hid these new-comers to
our earth. Once a leash of thin black whips, like the arms of an octopus,
flashed across the sunset and was immediately withdrawn, and afterwards a thin
rod rose up, joint by joint, bearing at its apex a circular disk that spun with
a wobbling motion. What could be going on there?</p>
<p>Most of the spectators had gathered in one or two groups—one a little
crowd towards Woking, the other a knot of people in the direction of Chobham.
Evidently they shared my mental conflict. There were few near me. One man I
approached—he was, I perceived, a neighbour of mine, though I did not
know his name—and accosted. But it was scarcely a time for articulate
conversation.</p>
<p>“What ugly <i>brutes</i>!” he said. “Good God! What ugly
brutes!” He repeated this over and over again.</p>
<p>“Did you see a man in the pit?” I said; but he made no answer to
that. We became silent, and stood watching for a time side by side, deriving, I
fancy, a certain comfort in one another’s company. Then I shifted my
position to a little knoll that gave me the advantage of a yard or more of
elevation and when I looked for him presently he was walking towards Woking.</p>
<p>The sunset faded to twilight before anything further happened. The crowd far
away on the left, towards Woking, seemed to grow, and I heard now a faint
murmur from it. The little knot of people towards Chobham dispersed. There was
scarcely an intimation of movement from the pit.</p>
<p>It was this, as much as anything, that gave people courage, and I suppose the
new arrivals from Woking also helped to restore confidence. At any rate, as the
dusk came on a slow, intermittent movement upon the sand-pits began, a movement
that seemed to gather force as the stillness of the evening about the cylinder
remained unbroken. Vertical black figures in twos and threes would advance,
stop, watch, and advance again, spreading out as they did so in a thin
irregular crescent that promised to enclose the pit in its attenuated horns. I,
too, on my side began to move towards the pit.</p>
<p>Then I saw some cabmen and others had walked boldly into the sand-pits, and
heard the clatter of hoofs and the gride of wheels. I saw a lad trundling off
the barrow of apples. And then, within thirty yards of the pit, advancing from
the direction of Horsell, I noted a little black knot of men, the foremost of
whom was waving a white flag.</p>
<p>This was the Deputation. There had been a hasty consultation, and since the
Martians were evidently, in spite of their repulsive forms, intelligent
creatures, it had been resolved to show them, by approaching them with signals,
that we too were intelligent.</p>
<p>Flutter, flutter, went the flag, first to the right, then to the left. It was
too far for me to recognise anyone there, but afterwards I learned that Ogilvy,
Stent, and Henderson were with others in this attempt at communication. This
little group had in its advance dragged inward, so to speak, the circumference
of the now almost complete circle of people, and a number of dim black figures
followed it at discreet distances.</p>
<p>Suddenly there was a flash of light, and a quantity of luminous greenish smoke
came out of the pit in three distinct puffs, which drove up, one after the
other, straight into the still air.</p>
<p>This smoke (or flame, perhaps, would be the better word for it) was so bright
that the deep blue sky overhead and the hazy stretches of brown common towards
Chertsey, set with black pine trees, seemed to darken abruptly as these puffs
arose, and to remain the darker after their dispersal. At the same time a faint
hissing sound became audible.</p>
<p>Beyond the pit stood the little wedge of people with the white flag at its
apex, arrested by these phenomena, a little knot of small vertical black shapes
upon the black ground. As the green smoke arose, their faces flashed out pallid
green, and faded again as it vanished. Then slowly the hissing passed into a
humming, into a long, loud, droning noise. Slowly a humped shape rose out of
the pit, and the ghost of a beam of light seemed to flicker out from it.</p>
<p>Forthwith flashes of actual flame, a bright glare leaping from one to another,
sprang from the scattered group of men. It was as if some invisible jet
impinged upon them and flashed into white flame. It was as if each man were
suddenly and momentarily turned to fire.</p>
<p>Then, by the light of their own destruction, I saw them staggering and falling,
and their supporters turning to run.</p>
<p>I stood staring, not as yet realising that this was death leaping from man to
man in that little distant crowd. All I felt was that it was something very
strange. An almost noiseless and blinding flash of light, and a man fell
headlong and lay still; and as the unseen shaft of heat passed over them, pine
trees burst into fire, and every dry furze bush became with one dull thud a
mass of flames. And far away towards Knaphill I saw the flashes of trees and
hedges and wooden buildings suddenly set alight.</p>
<p>It was sweeping round swiftly and steadily, this flaming death, this invisible,
inevitable sword of heat. I perceived it coming towards me by the flashing
bushes it touched, and was too astounded and stupefied to stir. I heard the
crackle of fire in the sand-pits and the sudden squeal of a horse that was as
suddenly stilled. Then it was as if an invisible yet intensely heated finger
were drawn through the heather between me and the Martians, and all along a
curving line beyond the sand-pits the dark ground smoked and crackled.
Something fell with a crash far away to the left where the road from Woking
station opens out on the common. Forth-with the hissing and humming ceased, and
the black, dome-like object sank slowly out of sight into the pit.</p>
<p>All this had happened with such swiftness that I had stood motionless,
dumbfounded and dazzled by the flashes of light. Had that death swept through a
full circle, it must inevitably have slain me in my surprise. But it passed and
spared me, and left the night about me suddenly dark and unfamiliar.</p>
<p>The undulating common seemed now dark almost to blackness, except where its
roadways lay grey and pale under the deep blue sky of the early night. It was
dark, and suddenly void of men. Overhead the stars were mustering, and in the
west the sky was still a pale, bright, almost greenish blue. The tops of the
pine trees and the roofs of Horsell came out sharp and black against the
western afterglow. The Martians and their appliances were altogether invisible,
save for that thin mast upon which their restless mirror wobbled. Patches of
bush and isolated trees here and there smoked and glowed still, and the houses
towards Woking station were sending up spires of flame into the stillness of
the evening air.</p>
<p>Nothing was changed save for that and a terrible astonishment. The little group
of black specks with the flag of white had been swept out of existence, and the
stillness of the evening, so it seemed to me, had scarcely been broken.</p>
<p>It came to me that I was upon this dark common, helpless, unprotected, and
alone. Suddenly, like a thing falling upon me from without, came—fear.</p>
<p>With an effort I turned and began a stumbling run through the heather.</p>
<p>The fear I felt was no rational fear, but a panic terror not only of the
Martians, but of the dusk and stillness all about me. Such an extraordinary
effect in unmanning me it had that I ran weeping silently as a child might do.
Once I had turned, I did not dare to look back.</p>
<p>I remember I felt an extraordinary persuasion that I was being played with,
that presently, when I was upon the very verge of safety, this mysterious
death—as swift as the passage of light—would leap after me from the
pit about the cylinder, and strike me down.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN>VI.<br/> THE HEAT-RAY IN THE CHOBHAM ROAD.</h2>
<p>It is still a matter of wonder how the Martians are able to slay men so swiftly
and so silently. Many think that in some way they are able to generate an
intense heat in a chamber of practically absolute non-conductivity. This
intense heat they project in a parallel beam against any object they choose, by
means of a polished parabolic mirror of unknown composition, much as the
parabolic mirror of a lighthouse projects a beam of light. But no one has
absolutely proved these details. However it is done, it is certain that a beam
of heat is the essence of the matter. Heat, and invisible, instead of visible,
light. Whatever is combustible flashes into flame at its touch, lead runs like
water, it softens iron, cracks and melts glass, and when it falls upon water,
incontinently that explodes into steam.</p>
<p>That night nearly forty people lay under the starlight about the pit, charred
and distorted beyond recognition, and all night long the common from Horsell to
Maybury was deserted and brightly ablaze.</p>
<p>The news of the massacre probably reached Chobham, Woking, and Ottershaw about
the same time. In Woking the shops had closed when the tragedy happened, and a
number of people, shop people and so forth, attracted by the stories they had
heard, were walking over the Horsell Bridge and along the road between the
hedges that runs out at last upon the common. You may imagine the young people
brushed up after the labours of the day, and making this novelty, as they would
make any novelty, the excuse for walking together and enjoying a trivial
flirtation. You may figure to yourself the hum of voices along the road in the
gloaming. . . .</p>
<p>As yet, of course, few people in Woking even knew that the cylinder had opened,
though poor Henderson had sent a messenger on a bicycle to the post office with
a special wire to an evening paper.</p>
<p>As these folks came out by twos and threes upon the open, they found little
knots of people talking excitedly and peering at the spinning mirror over the
sand-pits, and the newcomers were, no doubt, soon infected by the excitement of
the occasion.</p>
<p>By half past eight, when the Deputation was destroyed, there may have been a
crowd of three hundred people or more at this place, besides those who had left
the road to approach the Martians nearer. There were three policemen too, one
of whom was mounted, doing their best, under instructions from Stent, to keep
the people back and deter them from approaching the cylinder. There was some
booing from those more thoughtless and excitable souls to whom a crowd is
always an occasion for noise and horse-play.</p>
<p>Stent and Ogilvy, anticipating some possibilities of a collision, had
telegraphed from Horsell to the barracks as soon as the Martians emerged, for
the help of a company of soldiers to protect these strange creatures from
violence. After that they returned to lead that ill-fated advance. The
description of their death, as it was seen by the crowd, tallies very closely
with my own impressions: the three puffs of green smoke, the deep humming note,
and the flashes of flame.</p>
<p>But that crowd of people had a far narrower escape than mine. Only the fact
that a hummock of heathery sand intercepted the lower part of the Heat-Ray
saved them. Had the elevation of the parabolic mirror been a few yards higher,
none could have lived to tell the tale. They saw the flashes and the men
falling and an invisible hand, as it were, lit the bushes as it hurried towards
them through the twilight. Then, with a whistling note that rose above the
droning of the pit, the beam swung close over their heads, lighting the tops of
the beech trees that line the road, and splitting the bricks, smashing the
windows, firing the window frames, and bringing down in crumbling ruin a
portion of the gable of the house nearest the corner.</p>
<p>In the sudden thud, hiss, and glare of the igniting trees, the panic-stricken
crowd seems to have swayed hesitatingly for some moments. Sparks and burning
twigs began to fall into the road, and single leaves like puffs of flame. Hats
and dresses caught fire. Then came a crying from the common. There were shrieks
and shouts, and suddenly a mounted policeman came galloping through the
confusion with his hands clasped over his head, screaming.</p>
<p>“They’re coming!” a woman shrieked, and incontinently
everyone was turning and pushing at those behind, in order to clear their way
to Woking again. They must have bolted as blindly as a flock of sheep. Where
the road grows narrow and black between the high banks the crowd jammed, and a
desperate struggle occurred. All that crowd did not escape; three persons at
least, two women and a little boy, were crushed and trampled there, and left to
die amid the terror and the darkness.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap07"></SPAN>VII.<br/> HOW I REACHED HOME.</h2>
<p>For my own part, I remember nothing of my flight except the stress of
blundering against trees and stumbling through the heather. All about me
gathered the invisible terrors of the Martians; that pitiless sword of heat
seemed whirling to and fro, flourishing overhead before it descended and smote
me out of life. I came into the road between the crossroads and Horsell, and
ran along this to the crossroads.</p>
<p>At last I could go no further; I was exhausted with the violence of my emotion
and of my flight, and I staggered and fell by the wayside. That was near the
bridge that crosses the canal by the gasworks. I fell and lay still.</p>
<p>I must have remained there some time.</p>
<p>I sat up, strangely perplexed. For a moment, perhaps, I could not clearly
understand how I came there. My terror had fallen from me like a garment. My
hat had gone, and my collar had burst away from its fastener. A few minutes
before, there had only been three real things before me—the immensity of
the night and space and nature, my own feebleness and anguish, and the near
approach of death. Now it was as if something turned over, and the point of
view altered abruptly. There was no sensible transition from one state of mind
to the other. I was immediately the self of every day again—a decent,
ordinary citizen. The silent common, the impulse of my flight, the starting
flames, were as if they had been in a dream. I asked myself had these latter
things indeed happened? I could not credit it.</p>
<p>I rose and walked unsteadily up the steep incline of the bridge. My mind was
blank wonder. My muscles and nerves seemed drained of their strength. I dare
say I staggered drunkenly. A head rose over the arch, and the figure of a
workman carrying a basket appeared. Beside him ran a little boy. He passed me,
wishing me good night. I was minded to speak to him, but did not. I answered
his greeting with a meaningless mumble and went on over the bridge.</p>
<p>Over the Maybury arch a train, a billowing tumult of white, firelit smoke, and
a long caterpillar of lighted windows, went flying south—clatter,
clatter, clap, rap, and it had gone. A dim group of people talked in the gate
of one of the houses in the pretty little row of gables that was called
Oriental Terrace. It was all so real and so familiar. And that behind me! It
was frantic, fantastic! Such things, I told myself, could not be.</p>
<p>Perhaps I am a man of exceptional moods. I do not know how far my experience is
common. At times I suffer from the strangest sense of detachment from myself
and the world about me; I seem to watch it all from the outside, from somewhere
inconceivably remote, out of time, out of space, out of the stress and tragedy
of it all. This feeling was very strong upon me that night. Here was another
side to my dream.</p>
<p>But the trouble was the blank incongruity of this serenity and the swift death
flying yonder, not two miles away. There was a noise of business from the
gasworks, and the electric lamps were all alight. I stopped at the group of
people.</p>
<p>“What news from the common?” said I.</p>
<p>There were two men and a woman at the gate.</p>
<p>“Eh?” said one of the men, turning.</p>
<p>“What news from the common?” I said.</p>
<p>“Ain’t yer just <i>been</i> there?” asked the men.</p>
<p>“People seem fair silly about the common,” said the woman over the
gate. “What’s it all abart?”</p>
<p>“Haven’t you heard of the men from Mars?” said I; “the
creatures from Mars?”</p>
<p>“Quite enough,” said the woman over the gate. “Thenks”;
and all three of them laughed.</p>
<p>I felt foolish and angry. I tried and found I could not tell them what I had
seen. They laughed again at my broken sentences.</p>
<p>“You’ll hear more yet,” I said, and went on to my home.</p>
<p>I startled my wife at the doorway, so haggard was I. I went into the dining
room, sat down, drank some wine, and so soon as I could collect myself
sufficiently I told her the things I had seen. The dinner, which was a cold
one, had already been served, and remained neglected on the table while I told
my story.</p>
<p>“There is one thing,” I said, to allay the fears I had aroused;
“they are the most sluggish things I ever saw crawl. They may keep the
pit and kill people who come near them, but they cannot get out of it. . . .
But the horror of them!”</p>
<p>“Don’t, dear!” said my wife, knitting her brows and putting
her hand on mine.</p>
<p>“Poor Ogilvy!” I said. “To think he may be lying dead
there!”</p>
<p>My wife at least did not find my experience incredible. When I saw how deadly
white her face was, I ceased abruptly.</p>
<p>“They may come here,” she said again and again.</p>
<p>I pressed her to take wine, and tried to reassure her.</p>
<p>“They can scarcely move,” I said.</p>
<p>I began to comfort her and myself by repeating all that Ogilvy had told me of
the impossibility of the Martians establishing themselves on the earth. In
particular I laid stress on the gravitational difficulty. On the surface of the
earth the force of gravity is three times what it is on the surface of Mars. A
Martian, therefore, would weigh three times more than on Mars, albeit his
muscular strength would be the same. His own body would be a cope of lead to
him, therefore. That, indeed, was the general opinion. Both <i>The Times</i>
and the <i>Daily Telegraph</i>, for instance, insisted on it the next morning,
and both overlooked, just as I did, two obvious modifying influences.</p>
<p>The atmosphere of the earth, we now know, contains far more oxygen or far less
argon (whichever way one likes to put it) than does Mars’. The invigorating
influences of this excess of oxygen upon the Martians indisputably did much to
counterbalance the increased weight of their bodies. And, in the second place,
we all overlooked the fact that such mechanical intelligence as the Martian
possessed was quite able to dispense with muscular exertion at a pinch.</p>
<p>But I did not consider these points at the time, and so my reasoning was dead
against the chances of the invaders. With wine and food, the confidence of my
own table, and the necessity of reassuring my wife, I grew by insensible
degrees courageous and secure.</p>
<p>“They have done a foolish thing,” said I, fingering my wineglass.
“They are dangerous because, no doubt, they are mad with terror. Perhaps
they expected to find no living things—certainly no intelligent living
things.”</p>
<p>“A shell in the pit,” said I, “if the worst comes to the worst,
will kill them all.”</p>
<p>The intense excitement of the events had no doubt left my perceptive powers in
a state of erethism. I remember that dinner table with extraordinary vividness
even now. My dear wife’s sweet anxious face peering at me from under the
pink lamp shade, the white cloth with its silver and glass table
furniture—for in those days even philosophical writers had many little
luxuries—the crimson-purple wine in my glass, are photographically
distinct. At the end of it I sat, tempering nuts with a cigarette, regretting
Ogilvy’s rashness, and denouncing the short-sighted timidity of the
Martians.</p>
<p>So some respectable dodo in the Mauritius might have lorded it in his nest, and
discussed the arrival of that shipful of pitiless sailors in want of animal
food. “We will peck them to death tomorrow, my dear.”</p>
<p>I did not know it, but that was the last civilised dinner I was to eat for very
many strange and terrible days.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>VIII.<br/> FRIDAY NIGHT.</h2>
<p>The most extraordinary thing to my mind, of all the strange and wonderful
things that happened upon that Friday, was the dovetailing of the commonplace
habits of our social order with the first beginnings of the series of events
that was to topple that social order headlong. If on Friday night you had taken
a pair of compasses and drawn a circle with a radius of five miles round the
Woking sand-pits, I doubt if you would have had one human being outside it,
unless it were some relation of Stent or of the three or four cyclists or
London people lying dead on the common, whose emotions or habits were at all
affected by the new-comers. Many people had heard of the cylinder, of course,
and talked about it in their leisure, but it certainly did not make the
sensation that an ultimatum to Germany would have done.</p>
<p>In London that night poor Henderson’s telegram describing the gradual
unscrewing of the shot was judged to be a canard, and his evening paper, after
wiring for authentication from him and receiving no reply—the man was
killed—decided not to print a special edition.</p>
<p>Even within the five-mile circle the great majority of people were inert. I
have already described the behaviour of the men and women to whom I spoke. All
over the district people were dining and supping; working men were gardening
after the labours of the day, children were being put to bed, young people were
wandering through the lanes love-making, students sat over their books.</p>
<p>Maybe there was a murmur in the village streets, a novel and dominant topic in
the public-houses, and here and there a messenger, or even an eye-witness of
the later occurrences, caused a whirl of excitement, a shouting, and a running
to and fro; but for the most part the daily routine of working, eating,
drinking, sleeping, went on as it had done for countless years—as though
no planet Mars existed in the sky. Even at Woking station and Horsell and
Chobham that was the case.</p>
<p>In Woking junction, until a late hour, trains were stopping and going on,
others were shunting on the sidings, passengers were alighting and waiting, and
everything was proceeding in the most ordinary way. A boy from the town,
trenching on Smith’s monopoly, was selling papers with the
afternoon’s news. The ringing impact of trucks, the sharp whistle of the
engines from the junction, mingled with their shouts of “Men from
Mars!” Excited men came into the station about nine o’clock with
incredible tidings, and caused no more disturbance than drunkards might have
done. People rattling Londonwards peered into the darkness outside the carriage
windows, and saw only a rare, flickering, vanishing spark dance up from the
direction of Horsell, a red glow and a thin veil of smoke driving across the
stars, and thought that nothing more serious than a heath fire was happening.
It was only round the edge of the common that any disturbance was perceptible.
There were half a dozen villas burning on the Woking border. There were lights
in all the houses on the common side of the three villages, and the people
there kept awake till dawn.</p>
<p>A curious crowd lingered restlessly, people coming and going but the crowd
remaining, both on the Chobham and Horsell bridges. One or two adventurous
souls, it was afterwards found, went into the darkness and crawled quite near
the Martians; but they never returned, for now and again a light-ray, like the
beam of a warship’s searchlight swept the common, and the Heat-Ray was
ready to follow. Save for such, that big area of common was silent and
desolate, and the charred bodies lay about on it all night under the stars, and
all the next day. A noise of hammering from the pit was heard by many people.</p>
<p>So you have the state of things on Friday night. In the centre, sticking into
the skin of our old planet Earth like a poisoned dart, was this cylinder. But
the poison was scarcely working yet. Around it was a patch of silent common,
smouldering in places, and with a few dark, dimly seen objects lying in
contorted attitudes here and there. Here and there was a burning bush or tree.
Beyond was a fringe of excitement, and farther than that fringe the
inflammation had not crept as yet. In the rest of the world the stream of life
still flowed as it had flowed for immemorial years. The fever of war that would
presently clog vein and artery, deaden nerve and destroy brain, had still to
develop.</p>
<p>All night long the Martians were hammering and stirring, sleepless,
indefatigable, at work upon the machines they were making ready, and ever and
again a puff of greenish-white smoke whirled up to the starlit sky.</p>
<p>About eleven a company of soldiers came through Horsell, and deployed along the
edge of the common to form a cordon. Later a second company marched through
Chobham to deploy on the north side of the common. Several officers from the
Inkerman barracks had been on the common earlier in the day, and one, Major
Eden, was reported to be missing. The colonel of the regiment came to the
Chobham bridge and was busy questioning the crowd at midnight. The military
authorities were certainly alive to the seriousness of the business. About
eleven, the next morning’s papers were able to say, a squadron of
hussars, two Maxims, and about four hundred men of the Cardigan regiment
started from Aldershot.</p>
<p>A few seconds after midnight the crowd in the Chertsey road, Woking, saw a star
fall from heaven into the pine woods to the northwest. It had a greenish
colour, and caused a silent brightness like summer lightning. This was the
second cylinder.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>IX.<br/> THE FIGHTING BEGINS.</h2>
<p>Saturday lives in my memory as a day of suspense. It was a day of lassitude
too, hot and close, with, I am told, a rapidly fluctuating barometer. I had
slept but little, though my wife had succeeded in sleeping, and I rose early. I
went into my garden before breakfast and stood listening, but towards the
common there was nothing stirring but a lark.</p>
<p>The milkman came as usual. I heard the rattle of his chariot and I went round
to the side gate to ask the latest news. He told me that during the night the
Martians had been surrounded by troops, and that guns were expected.
Then—a familiar, reassuring note—I heard a train running towards
Woking.</p>
<p>“They aren’t to be killed,” said the milkman, “if that
can possibly be avoided.”</p>
<p>I saw my neighbour gardening, chatted with him for a time, and then strolled in
to breakfast. It was a most unexceptional morning. My neighbour was of opinion
that the troops would be able to capture or to destroy the Martians during the
day.</p>
<p>“It’s a pity they make themselves so unapproachable,” he
said. “It would be curious to know how they live on another planet; we
might learn a thing or two.”</p>
<p>He came up to the fence and extended a handful of strawberries, for his
gardening was as generous as it was enthusiastic. At the same time he told me
of the burning of the pine woods about the Byfleet Golf Links.</p>
<p>“They say,” said he, “that there’s another of those
blessed things fallen there—number two. But one’s enough, surely.
This lot’ll cost the insurance people a pretty penny before
everything’s settled.” He laughed with an air of the greatest good
humour as he said this. The woods, he said, were still burning, and pointed out
a haze of smoke to me. “They will be hot under foot for days, on account
of the thick soil of pine needles and turf,” he said, and then grew
serious over “poor Ogilvy.”</p>
<p>After breakfast, instead of working, I decided to walk down towards the common.
Under the railway bridge I found a group of soldiers—sappers, I think,
men in small round caps, dirty red jackets unbuttoned, and showing their blue
shirts, dark trousers, and boots coming to the calf. They told me no one was
allowed over the canal, and, looking along the road towards the bridge, I saw
one of the Cardigan men standing sentinel there. I talked with these soldiers
for a time; I told them of my sight of the Martians on the previous evening.
None of them had seen the Martians, and they had but the vaguest ideas of them,
so that they plied me with questions. They said that they did not know who had
authorised the movements of the troops; their idea was that a dispute had
arisen at the Horse Guards. The ordinary sapper is a great deal better educated
than the common soldier, and they discussed the peculiar conditions of the
possible fight with some acuteness. I described the Heat-Ray to them, and they
began to argue among themselves.</p>
<p>“Crawl up under cover and rush ’em, say I,” said one.</p>
<p>“Get aht!” said another. “What’s cover against this
’ere ’eat? Sticks to cook yer! What we got to do is to go as near
as the ground’ll let us, and then drive a trench.”</p>
<p>“Blow yer trenches! You always want trenches; you ought to ha’ been
born a rabbit Snippy.”</p>
<p>“Ain’t they got any necks, then?” said a third,
abruptly—a little, contemplative, dark man, smoking a pipe.</p>
<p>I repeated my description.</p>
<p>“Octopuses,” said he, “that’s what I calls ’em.
Talk about fishers of men—fighters of fish it is this time!”</p>
<p>“It ain’t no murder killing beasts like that,” said the first
speaker.</p>
<p>“Why not shell the darned things strite off and finish ’em?”
said the little dark man. “You carn tell what they might do.”</p>
<p>“Where’s your shells?” said the first speaker. “There
ain’t no time. Do it in a rush, that’s my tip, and do it at
once.”</p>
<p>So they discussed it. After a while I left them, and went on to the railway
station to get as many morning papers as I could.</p>
<p>But I will not weary the reader with a description of that long morning and of
the longer afternoon. I did not succeed in getting a glimpse of the common, for
even Horsell and Chobham church towers were in the hands of the military
authorities. The soldiers I addressed didn’t know anything; the officers
were mysterious as well as busy. I found people in the town quite secure again
in the presence of the military, and I heard for the first time from Marshall,
the tobacconist, that his son was among the dead on the common. The soldiers
had made the people on the outskirts of Horsell lock up and leave their houses.</p>
<p>I got back to lunch about two, very tired for, as I have said, the day was
extremely hot and dull; and in order to refresh myself I took a cold bath in
the afternoon. About half past four I went up to the railway station to get an
evening paper, for the morning papers had contained only a very inaccurate
description of the killing of Stent, Henderson, Ogilvy, and the others. But
there was little I didn’t know. The Martians did not show an inch of
themselves. They seemed busy in their pit, and there was a sound of hammering
and an almost continuous streamer of smoke. Apparently they were busy getting
ready for a struggle. “Fresh attempts have been made to signal, but
without success,” was the stereotyped formula of the papers. A sapper
told me it was done by a man in a ditch with a flag on a long pole. The
Martians took as much notice of such advances as we should of the lowing of a
cow.</p>
<p>I must confess the sight of all this armament, all this preparation, greatly
excited me. My imagination became belligerent, and defeated the invaders in a
dozen striking ways; something of my schoolboy dreams of battle and heroism
came back. It hardly seemed a fair fight to me at that time. They seemed very
helpless in that pit of theirs.</p>
<p>About three o’clock there began the thud of a gun at measured intervals
from Chertsey or Addlestone. I learned that the smouldering pine wood into
which the second cylinder had fallen was being shelled, in the hope of
destroying that object before it opened. It was only about five, however, that
a field gun reached Chobham for use against the first body of Martians.</p>
<p>About six in the evening, as I sat at tea with my wife in the summerhouse
talking vigorously about the battle that was lowering upon us, I heard a
muffled detonation from the common, and immediately after a gust of firing.
Close on the heels of that came a violent rattling crash, quite close to us,
that shook the ground; and, starting out upon the lawn, I saw the tops of the
trees about the Oriental College burst into smoky red flame, and the tower of
the little church beside it slide down into ruin. The pinnacle of the mosque
had vanished, and the roof line of the college itself looked as if a
hundred-ton gun had been at work upon it. One of our chimneys cracked as if a
shot had hit it, flew, and a piece of it came clattering down the tiles and
made a heap of broken red fragments upon the flower bed by my study window.</p>
<p>I and my wife stood amazed. Then I realised that the crest of Maybury Hill must
be within range of the Martians’ Heat-Ray now that the college was
cleared out of the way.</p>
<p>At that I gripped my wife’s arm, and without ceremony ran her out into
the road. Then I fetched out the servant, telling her I would go upstairs
myself for the box she was clamouring for.</p>
<p>“We can’t possibly stay here,” I said; and as I spoke the
firing reopened for a moment upon the common.</p>
<p>“But where are we to go?” said my wife in terror.</p>
<p>I thought perplexed. Then I remembered her cousins at Leatherhead.</p>
<p>“Leatherhead!” I shouted above the sudden noise.</p>
<p>She looked away from me downhill. The people were coming out of their houses,
astonished.</p>
<p>“How are we to get to Leatherhead?” she said.</p>
<p>Down the hill I saw a bevy of hussars ride under the railway bridge; three
galloped through the open gates of the Oriental College; two others dismounted,
and began running from house to house. The sun, shining through the smoke that
drove up from the tops of the trees, seemed blood red, and threw an unfamiliar
lurid light upon everything.</p>
<p>“Stop here,” said I; “you are safe here”; and I started
off at once for the Spotted Dog, for I knew the landlord had a horse and dog
cart. I ran, for I perceived that in a moment everyone upon this side of the
hill would be moving. I found him in his bar, quite unaware of what was going
on behind his house. A man stood with his back to me, talking to him.</p>
<p>“I must have a pound,” said the landlord, “and I’ve no
one to drive it.”</p>
<p>“I’ll give you two,” said I, over the stranger’s
shoulder.</p>
<p>“What for?”</p>
<p>“And I’ll bring it back by midnight,” I said.</p>
<p>“Lord!” said the landlord; “what’s the hurry? I’m
selling my bit of a pig. Two pounds, and you bring it back? What’s going
on now?”</p>
<p>I explained hastily that I had to leave my home, and so secured the dog cart.
At the time it did not seem to me nearly so urgent that the landlord should
leave his. I took care to have the cart there and then, drove it off down the
road, and, leaving it in charge of my wife and servant, rushed into my house
and packed a few valuables, such plate as we had, and so forth. The beech trees
below the house were burning while I did this, and the palings up the road
glowed red. While I was occupied in this way, one of the dismounted hussars
came running up. He was going from house to house, warning people to leave. He
was going on as I came out of my front door, lugging my treasures, done up in a
tablecloth. I shouted after him:</p>
<p>“What news?”</p>
<p>He turned, stared, bawled something about “crawling out in a thing like a
dish cover,” and ran on to the gate of the house at the crest. A sudden
whirl of black smoke driving across the road hid him for a moment. I ran to my
neighbour’s door and rapped to satisfy myself of what I already knew,
that his wife had gone to London with him and had locked up their house. I went
in again, according to my promise, to get my servant’s box, lugged it
out, clapped it beside her on the tail of the dog cart, and then caught the
reins and jumped up into the driver’s seat beside my wife. In another
moment we were clear of the smoke and noise, and spanking down the opposite
slope of Maybury Hill towards Old Woking.</p>
<p>In front was a quiet sunny landscape, a wheat field ahead on either side of the
road, and the Maybury Inn with its swinging sign. I saw the doctor’s cart
ahead of me. At the bottom of the hill I turned my head to look at the hillside
I was leaving. Thick streamers of black smoke shot with threads of red fire
were driving up into the still air, and throwing dark shadows upon the green
treetops eastward. The smoke already extended far away to the east and
west—to the Byfleet pine woods eastward, and to Woking on the west. The
road was dotted with people running towards us. And very faint now, but very
distinct through the hot, quiet air, one heard the whirr of a machine-gun that
was presently stilled, and an intermittent cracking of rifles. Apparently the
Martians were setting fire to everything within range of their Heat-Ray.</p>
<p>I am not an expert driver, and I had immediately to turn my attention to the
horse. When I looked back again the second hill had hidden the black smoke. I
slashed the horse with the whip, and gave him a loose rein until Woking and
Send lay between us and that quivering tumult. I overtook and passed the doctor
between Woking and Send.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN>X.<br/> IN THE STORM.</h2>
<p>Leatherhead is about twelve miles from Maybury Hill. The scent of hay was in
the air through the lush meadows beyond Pyrford, and the hedges on either side
were sweet and gay with multitudes of dog-roses. The heavy firing that had
broken out while we were driving down Maybury Hill ceased as abruptly as it
began, leaving the evening very peaceful and still. We got to Leatherhead
without misadventure about nine o’clock, and the horse had an
hour’s rest while I took supper with my cousins and commended my wife to
their care.</p>
<p>My wife was curiously silent throughout the drive, and seemed oppressed with
forebodings of evil. I talked to her reassuringly, pointing out that the
Martians were tied to the pit by sheer heaviness, and at the utmost could but
crawl a little out of it; but she answered only in monosyllables. Had it not
been for my promise to the innkeeper, she would, I think, have urged me to stay
in Leatherhead that night. Would that I had! Her face, I remember, was very
white as we parted.</p>
<p>For my own part, I had been feverishly excited all day. Something very like the
war fever that occasionally runs through a civilised community had got into my
blood, and in my heart I was not so very sorry that I had to return to Maybury
that night. I was even afraid that that last fusillade I had heard might mean
the extermination of our invaders from Mars. I can best express my state of
mind by saying that I wanted to be in at the death.</p>
<p>It was nearly eleven when I started to return. The night was unexpectedly dark;
to me, walking out of the lighted passage of my cousins’ house, it seemed
indeed black, and it was as hot and close as the day. Overhead the clouds were
driving fast, albeit not a breath stirred the shrubs about us. My
cousins’ man lit both lamps. Happily, I knew the road intimately. My wife
stood in the light of the doorway, and watched me until I jumped up into the
dog cart. Then abruptly she turned and went in, leaving my cousins side by side
wishing me good hap.</p>
<p>I was a little depressed at first with the contagion of my wife’s fears,
but very soon my thoughts reverted to the Martians. At that time I was
absolutely in the dark as to the course of the evening’s fighting. I did
not know even the circumstances that had precipitated the conflict. As I came
through Ockham (for that was the way I returned, and not through Send and Old
Woking) I saw along the western horizon a blood-red glow, which as I drew
nearer, crept slowly up the sky. The driving clouds of the gathering
thunderstorm mingled there with masses of black and red smoke.</p>
<p>Ripley Street was deserted, and except for a lighted window or so the village
showed not a sign of life; but I narrowly escaped an accident at the corner of
the road to Pyrford, where a knot of people stood with their backs to me. They
said nothing to me as I passed. I do not know what they knew of the things
happening beyond the hill, nor do I know if the silent houses I passed on my
way were sleeping securely, or deserted and empty, or harassed and watching
against the terror of the night.</p>
<p>From Ripley until I came through Pyrford I was in the valley of the Wey, and
the red glare was hidden from me. As I ascended the little hill beyond Pyrford
Church the glare came into view again, and the trees about me shivered with the
first intimation of the storm that was upon me. Then I heard midnight pealing
out from Pyrford Church behind me, and then came the silhouette of Maybury
Hill, with its tree-tops and roofs black and sharp against the red.</p>
<p>Even as I beheld this a lurid green glare lit the road about me and showed the
distant woods towards Addlestone. I felt a tug at the reins. I saw that the
driving clouds had been pierced as it were by a thread of green fire, suddenly
lighting their confusion and falling into the field to my left. It was the
third falling star!</p>
<p>Close on its apparition, and blindingly violet by contrast, danced out the
first lightning of the gathering storm, and the thunder burst like a rocket
overhead. The horse took the bit between his teeth and bolted.</p>
<p>A moderate incline runs towards the foot of Maybury Hill, and down this we
clattered. Once the lightning had begun, it went on in as rapid a succession of
flashes as I have ever seen. The thunderclaps, treading one on the heels of
another and with a strange crackling accompaniment, sounded more like the
working of a gigantic electric machine than the usual detonating
reverberations. The flickering light was blinding and confusing, and a thin
hail smote gustily at my face as I drove down the slope.</p>
<p>At first I regarded little but the road before me, and then abruptly my
attention was arrested by something that was moving rapidly down the opposite
slope of Maybury Hill. At first I took it for the wet roof of a house, but one
flash following another showed it to be in swift rolling movement. It was an
elusive vision—a moment of bewildering darkness, and then, in a flash
like daylight, the red masses of the Orphanage near the crest of the hill, the
green tops of the pine trees, and this problematical object came out clear and
sharp and bright.</p>
<p>And this Thing I saw! How can I describe it? A monstrous tripod, higher than
many houses, striding over the young pine trees, and smashing them aside in its
career; a walking engine of glittering metal, striding now across the heather;
articulate ropes of steel dangling from it, and the clattering tumult of its
passage mingling with the riot of the thunder. A flash, and it came out
vividly, heeling over one way with two feet in the air, to vanish and reappear
almost instantly as it seemed, with the next flash, a hundred yards nearer. Can
you imagine a milking stool tilted and bowled violently along the ground? That
was the impression those instant flashes gave. But instead of a milking stool
imagine it a great body of machinery on a tripod stand.</p>
<p>Then suddenly the trees in the pine wood ahead of me were parted, as brittle
reeds are parted by a man thrusting through them; they were snapped off and
driven headlong, and a second huge tripod appeared, rushing, as it seemed,
headlong towards me. And I was galloping hard to meet it! At the sight of the
second monster my nerve went altogether. Not stopping to look again, I wrenched
the horse’s head hard round to the right and in another moment the dog
cart had heeled over upon the horse; the shafts smashed noisily, and I was
flung sideways and fell heavily into a shallow pool of water.</p>
<p>I crawled out almost immediately, and crouched, my feet still in the water,
under a clump of furze. The horse lay motionless (his neck was broken, poor
brute!) and by the lightning flashes I saw the black bulk of the overturned dog
cart and the silhouette of the wheel still spinning slowly. In another moment
the colossal mechanism went striding by me, and passed uphill towards Pyrford.</p>
<p>Seen nearer, the Thing was incredibly strange, for it was no mere insensate
machine driving on its way. Machine it was, with a ringing metallic pace, and
long, flexible, glittering tentacles (one of which gripped a young pine tree)
swinging and rattling about its strange body. It picked its road as it went
striding along, and the brazen hood that surmounted it moved to and fro with
the inevitable suggestion of a head looking about. Behind the main body was a
huge mass of white metal like a gigantic fisherman’s basket, and puffs of
green smoke squirted out from the joints of the limbs as the monster swept by
me. And in an instant it was gone.</p>
<p>So much I saw then, all vaguely for the flickering of the lightning, in
blinding highlights and dense black shadows.</p>
<p>As it passed it set up an exultant deafening howl that drowned the
thunder—“Aloo! Aloo!”—and in another minute it was with
its companion, half a mile away, stooping over something in the field. I have
no doubt this Thing in the field was the third of the ten cylinders they had
fired at us from Mars.</p>
<p>For some minutes I lay there in the rain and darkness watching, by the
intermittent light, these monstrous beings of metal moving about in the
distance over the hedge tops. A thin hail was now beginning, and as it came and
went their figures grew misty and then flashed into clearness again. Now and
then came a gap in the lightning, and the night swallowed them up.</p>
<p>I was soaked with hail above and puddle water below. It was some time before my
blank astonishment would let me struggle up the bank to a drier position, or
think at all of my imminent peril.</p>
<p>Not far from me was a little one-roomed squatter’s hut of wood,
surrounded by a patch of potato garden. I struggled to my feet at last, and,
crouching and making use of every chance of cover, I made a run for this. I
hammered at the door, but I could not make the people hear (if there were any
people inside), and after a time I desisted, and, availing myself of a ditch
for the greater part of the way, succeeded in crawling, unobserved by these
monstrous machines, into the pine woods towards Maybury.</p>
<p>Under cover of this I pushed on, wet and shivering now, towards my own house. I
walked among the trees trying to find the footpath. It was very dark indeed in
the wood, for the lightning was now becoming infrequent, and the hail, which
was pouring down in a torrent, fell in columns through the gaps in the heavy
foliage.</p>
<p>If I had fully realised the meaning of all the things I had seen I should have
immediately worked my way round through Byfleet to Street Cobham, and so gone
back to rejoin my wife at Leatherhead. But that night the strangeness of things
about me, and my physical wretchedness, prevented me, for I was bruised, weary,
wet to the skin, deafened and blinded by the storm.</p>
<p>I had a vague idea of going on to my own house, and that was as much motive as
I had. I staggered through the trees, fell into a ditch and bruised my knees
against a plank, and finally splashed out into the lane that ran down from the
College Arms. I say splashed, for the storm water was sweeping the sand down
the hill in a muddy torrent. There in the darkness a man blundered into me and
sent me reeling back.</p>
<p>He gave a cry of terror, sprang sideways, and rushed on before I could gather
my wits sufficiently to speak to him. So heavy was the stress of the storm just
at this place that I had the hardest task to win my way up the hill. I went
close up to the fence on the left and worked my way along its palings.</p>
<p>Near the top I stumbled upon something soft, and, by a flash of lightning, saw
between my feet a heap of black broadcloth and a pair of boots. Before I could
distinguish clearly how the man lay, the flicker of light had passed. I stood
over him waiting for the next flash. When it came, I saw that he was a sturdy
man, cheaply but not shabbily dressed; his head was bent under his body, and he
lay crumpled up close to the fence, as though he had been flung violently
against it.</p>
<p>Overcoming the repugnance natural to one who had never before touched a dead
body, I stooped and turned him over to feel for his heart. He was quite dead.
Apparently his neck had been broken. The lightning flashed for a third time,
and his face leaped upon me. I sprang to my feet. It was the landlord of the
Spotted Dog, whose conveyance I had taken.</p>
<p>I stepped over him gingerly and pushed on up the hill. I made my way by the
police station and the College Arms towards my own house. Nothing was burning
on the hillside, though from the common there still came a red glare and a
rolling tumult of ruddy smoke beating up against the drenching hail. So far as
I could see by the flashes, the houses about me were mostly uninjured. By the
College Arms a dark heap lay in the road.</p>
<p>Down the road towards Maybury Bridge there were voices and the sound of feet,
but I had not the courage to shout or to go to them. I let myself in with my
latchkey, closed, locked and bolted the door, staggered to the foot of the
staircase, and sat down. My imagination was full of those striding metallic
monsters, and of the dead body smashed against the fence.</p>
<p>I crouched at the foot of the staircase with my back to the wall, shivering
violently.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap11"></SPAN>XI.<br/> AT THE WINDOW.</h2>
<p>I have already said that my storms of emotion have a trick of exhausting
themselves. After a time I discovered that I was cold and wet, and with little
pools of water about me on the stair carpet. I got up almost mechanically, went
into the dining room and drank some whisky, and then I was moved to change my
clothes.</p>
<p>After I had done that I went upstairs to my study, but why I did so I do not
know. The window of my study looks over the trees and the railway towards
Horsell Common. In the hurry of our departure this window had been left open.
The passage was dark, and, by contrast with the picture the window frame
enclosed, the side of the room seemed impenetrably dark. I stopped short in the
doorway.</p>
<p>The thunderstorm had passed. The towers of the Oriental College and the pine
trees about it had gone, and very far away, lit by a vivid red glare, the
common about the sand-pits was visible. Across the light huge black shapes,
grotesque and strange, moved busily to and fro.</p>
<p>It seemed indeed as if the whole country in that direction was on fire—a
broad hillside set with minute tongues of flame, swaying and writhing with the
gusts of the dying storm, and throwing a red reflection upon the cloud scud
above. Every now and then a haze of smoke from some nearer conflagration drove
across the window and hid the Martian shapes. I could not see what they were
doing, nor the clear form of them, nor recognise the black objects they were
busied upon. Neither could I see the nearer fire, though the reflections of it
danced on the wall and ceiling of the study. A sharp, resinous tang of burning
was in the air.</p>
<p>I closed the door noiselessly and crept towards the window. As I did so, the
view opened out until, on the one hand, it reached to the houses about Woking
station, and on the other to the charred and blackened pine woods of Byfleet.
There was a light down below the hill, on the railway, near the arch, and
several of the houses along the Maybury road and the streets near the station
were glowing ruins. The light upon the railway puzzled me at first; there were
a black heap and a vivid glare, and to the right of that a row of yellow
oblongs. Then I perceived this was a wrecked train, the fore part smashed and
on fire, the hinder carriages still upon the rails.</p>
<p>Between these three main centres of light—the houses, the train, and the
burning county towards Chobham—stretched irregular patches of dark
country, broken here and there by intervals of dimly glowing and smoking
ground. It was the strangest spectacle, that black expanse set with fire. It
reminded me, more than anything else, of the Potteries at night. At first I
could distinguish no people at all, though I peered intently for them. Later I
saw against the light of Woking station a number of black figures hurrying one
after the other across the line.</p>
<p>And this was the little world in which I had been living securely for years,
this fiery chaos! What had happened in the last seven hours I still did not
know; nor did I know, though I was beginning to guess, the relation between
these mechanical colossi and the sluggish lumps I had seen disgorged from the
cylinder. With a queer feeling of impersonal interest I turned my desk chair to
the window, sat down, and stared at the blackened country, and particularly at
the three gigantic black things that were going to and fro in the glare about
the sand-pits.</p>
<p>They seemed amazingly busy. I began to ask myself what they could be. Were they
intelligent mechanisms? Such a thing I felt was impossible. Or did a Martian
sit within each, ruling, directing, using, much as a man’s brain sits and
rules in his body? I began to compare the things to human machines, to ask
myself for the first time in my life how an ironclad or a steam engine would
seem to an intelligent lower animal.</p>
<p>The storm had left the sky clear, and over the smoke of the burning land the
little fading pinpoint of Mars was dropping into the west, when a soldier came
into my garden. I heard a slight scraping at the fence, and rousing myself from
the lethargy that had fallen upon me, I looked down and saw him dimly,
clambering over the palings. At the sight of another human being my torpor
passed, and I leaned out of the window eagerly.</p>
<p>“Hist!” said I, in a whisper.</p>
<p>He stopped astride of the fence in doubt. Then he came over and across the lawn
to the corner of the house. He bent down and stepped softly.</p>
<p>“Who’s there?” he said, also whispering, standing under the
window and peering up.</p>
<p>“Where are you going?” I asked.</p>
<p>“God knows.”</p>
<p>“Are you trying to hide?”</p>
<p>“That’s it.”</p>
<p>“Come into the house,” I said.</p>
<p>I went down, unfastened the door, and let him in, and locked the door again. I
could not see his face. He was hatless, and his coat was unbuttoned.</p>
<p>“My God!” he said, as I drew him in.</p>
<p>“What has happened?” I asked.</p>
<p>“What hasn’t?” In the obscurity I could see he made a gesture
of despair. “They wiped us out—simply wiped us out,” he
repeated again and again.</p>
<p>He followed me, almost mechanically, into the dining room.</p>
<p>“Take some whisky,” I said, pouring out a stiff dose.</p>
<p>He drank it. Then abruptly he sat down before the table, put his head on his
arms, and began to sob and weep like a little boy, in a perfect passion of
emotion, while I, with a curious forgetfulness of my own recent despair, stood
beside him, wondering.</p>
<p>It was a long time before he could steady his nerves to answer my questions,
and then he answered perplexingly and brokenly. He was a driver in the
artillery, and had only come into action about seven. At that time firing was
going on across the common, and it was said the first party of Martians were
crawling slowly towards their second cylinder under cover of a metal shield.</p>
<p>Later this shield staggered up on tripod legs and became the first of the
fighting-machines I had seen. The gun he drove had been unlimbered near
Horsell, in order to command the sand-pits, and its arrival it was that had
precipitated the action. As the limber gunners went to the rear, his horse trod
in a rabbit hole and came down, throwing him into a depression of the ground.
At the same moment the gun exploded behind him, the ammunition blew up, there
was fire all about him, and he found himself lying under a heap of charred dead
men and dead horses.</p>
<p>“I lay still,” he said, “scared out of my wits, with the fore
quarter of a horse atop of me. We’d been wiped out. And the
smell—good God! Like burnt meat! I was hurt across the back by the fall
of the horse, and there I had to lie until I felt better. Just like parade it
had been a minute before—then stumble, bang, swish!”</p>
<p>“Wiped out!” he said.</p>
<p>He had hid under the dead horse for a long time, peeping out furtively across
the common. The Cardigan men had tried a rush, in skirmishing order, at the
pit, simply to be swept out of existence. Then the monster had risen to its
feet and had begun to walk leisurely to and fro across the common among the few
fugitives, with its headlike hood turning about exactly like the head of a
cowled human being. A kind of arm carried a complicated metallic case, about
which green flashes scintillated, and out of the funnel of this there smoked
the Heat-Ray.</p>
<p>In a few minutes there was, so far as the soldier could see, not a living thing
left upon the common, and every bush and tree upon it that was not already a
blackened skeleton was burning. The hussars had been on the road beyond the
curvature of the ground, and he saw nothing of them. He heard the Maxims rattle
for a time and then become still. The giant saved Woking station and its
cluster of houses until the last; then in a moment the Heat-Ray was brought to
bear, and the town became a heap of fiery ruins. Then the Thing shut off the
Heat-Ray, and turning its back upon the artilleryman, began to waddle away
towards the smouldering pine woods that sheltered the second cylinder. As it
did so a second glittering Titan built itself up out of the pit.</p>
<p>The second monster followed the first, and at that the artilleryman began to
crawl very cautiously across the hot heather ash towards Horsell. He managed to
get alive into the ditch by the side of the road, and so escaped to Woking.
There his story became ejaculatory. The place was impassable. It seems there
were a few people alive there, frantic for the most part and many burned and
scalded. He was turned aside by the fire, and hid among some almost scorching
heaps of broken wall as one of the Martian giants returned. He saw this one
pursue a man, catch him up in one of its steely tentacles, and knock his head
against the trunk of a pine tree. At last, after nightfall, the artilleryman
made a rush for it and got over the railway embankment.</p>
<p>Since then he had been skulking along towards Maybury, in the hope of getting
out of danger Londonward. People were hiding in trenches and cellars, and many
of the survivors had made off towards Woking village and Send. He had been
consumed with thirst until he found one of the water mains near the railway
arch smashed, and the water bubbling out like a spring upon the road.</p>
<p>That was the story I got from him, bit by bit. He grew calmer telling me and
trying to make me see the things he had seen. He had eaten no food since
midday, he told me early in his narrative, and I found some mutton and bread in
the pantry and brought it into the room. We lit no lamp for fear of attracting
the Martians, and ever and again our hands would touch upon bread or meat. As
he talked, things about us came darkly out of the darkness, and the trampled
bushes and broken rose trees outside the window grew distinct. It would seem
that a number of men or animals had rushed across the lawn. I began to see his
face, blackened and haggard, as no doubt mine was also.</p>
<p>When we had finished eating we went softly upstairs to my study, and I looked
again out of the open window. In one night the valley had become a valley of
ashes. The fires had dwindled now. Where flames had been there were now
streamers of smoke; but the countless ruins of shattered and gutted houses and
blasted and blackened trees that the night had hidden stood out now gaunt and
terrible in the pitiless light of dawn. Yet here and there some object had had
the luck to escape—a white railway signal here, the end of a greenhouse
there, white and fresh amid the wreckage. Never before in the history of
warfare had destruction been so indiscriminate and so universal. And shining
with the growing light of the east, three of the metallic giants stood about
the pit, their cowls rotating as though they were surveying the desolation they
had made.</p>
<p>It seemed to me that the pit had been enlarged, and ever and again puffs of
vivid green vapour streamed up and out of it towards the brightening
dawn—streamed up, whirled, broke, and vanished.</p>
<p>Beyond were the pillars of fire about Chobham. They became pillars of bloodshot
smoke at the first touch of day.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap12"></SPAN>XII.<br/> WHAT I SAW OF THE DESTRUCTION OF WEYBRIDGE AND SHEPPERTON.</h2>
<p>As the dawn grew brighter we withdrew from the window from which we had watched
the Martians, and went very quietly downstairs.</p>
<p>The artilleryman agreed with me that the house was no place to stay in. He
proposed, he said, to make his way Londonward, and thence rejoin his
battery—No. 12, of the Horse Artillery. My plan was to return at once to
Leatherhead; and so greatly had the strength of the Martians impressed me that
I had determined to take my wife to Newhaven, and go with her out of the
country forthwith. For I already perceived clearly that the country about
London must inevitably be the scene of a disastrous struggle before such
creatures as these could be destroyed.</p>
<p>Between us and Leatherhead, however, lay the third cylinder, with its guarding
giants. Had I been alone, I think I should have taken my chance and struck
across country. But the artilleryman dissuaded me: “It’s no
kindness to the right sort of wife,” he said, “to make her a
widow”; and in the end I agreed to go with him, under cover of the woods,
northward as far as Street Cobham before I parted with him. Thence I would make
a big detour by Epsom to reach Leatherhead.</p>
<p>I should have started at once, but my companion had been in active service and
he knew better than that. He made me ransack the house for a flask, which he
filled with whisky; and we lined every available pocket with packets of
biscuits and slices of meat. Then we crept out of the house, and ran as quickly
as we could down the ill-made road by which I had come overnight. The houses
seemed deserted. In the road lay a group of three charred bodies close
together, struck dead by the Heat-Ray; and here and there were things that
people had dropped—a clock, a slipper, a silver spoon, and the like poor
valuables. At the corner turning up towards the post office a little cart,
filled with boxes and furniture, and horseless, heeled over on a broken wheel.
A cash box had been hastily smashed open and thrown under the debris.</p>
<p>Except the lodge at the Orphanage, which was still on fire, none of the houses
had suffered very greatly here. The Heat-Ray had shaved the chimney tops and
passed. Yet, save ourselves, there did not seem to be a living soul on Maybury
Hill. The majority of the inhabitants had escaped, I suppose, by way of the Old
Woking road—the road I had taken when I drove to Leatherhead—or
they had hidden.</p>
<p>We went down the lane, by the body of the man in black, sodden now from the
overnight hail, and broke into the woods at the foot of the hill. We pushed
through these towards the railway without meeting a soul. The woods across the
line were but the scarred and blackened ruins of woods; for the most part the
trees had fallen, but a certain proportion still stood, dismal grey stems, with
dark brown foliage instead of green.</p>
<p>On our side the fire had done no more than scorch the nearer trees; it had
failed to secure its footing. In one place the woodmen had been at work on
Saturday; trees, felled and freshly trimmed, lay in a clearing, with heaps of
sawdust by the sawing-machine and its engine. Hard by was a temporary hut,
deserted. There was not a breath of wind this morning, and everything was
strangely still. Even the birds were hushed, and as we hurried along I and the
artilleryman talked in whispers and looked now and again over our shoulders.
Once or twice we stopped to listen.</p>
<p>After a time we drew near the road, and as we did so we heard the clatter of
hoofs and saw through the tree stems three cavalry soldiers riding slowly
towards Woking. We hailed them, and they halted while we hurried towards them.
It was a lieutenant and a couple of privates of the 8th Hussars, with a stand
like a theodolite, which the artilleryman told me was a heliograph.</p>
<p>“You are the first men I’ve seen coming this way this
morning,” said the lieutenant. “What’s brewing?”</p>
<p>His voice and face were eager. The men behind him stared curiously. The
artilleryman jumped down the bank into the road and saluted.</p>
<p>“Gun destroyed last night, sir. Have been hiding. Trying to rejoin
battery, sir. You’ll come in sight of the Martians, I expect, about half
a mile along this road.”</p>
<p>“What the dickens are they like?” asked the lieutenant.</p>
<p>“Giants in armour, sir. Hundred feet high. Three legs and a body like
’luminium, with a mighty great head in a hood, sir.”</p>
<p>“Get out!” said the lieutenant. “What confounded
nonsense!”</p>
<p>“You’ll see, sir. They carry a kind of box, sir, that shoots fire
and strikes you dead.”</p>
<p>“What d’ye mean—a gun?”</p>
<p>“No, sir,” and the artilleryman began a vivid account of the
Heat-Ray. Halfway through, the lieutenant interrupted him and looked up at me.
I was still standing on the bank by the side of the road.</p>
<p>“It’s perfectly true,” I said.</p>
<p>“Well,” said the lieutenant, “I suppose it’s my
business to see it too. Look here”—to the
artilleryman—“we’re detailed here clearing people out of
their houses. You’d better go along and report yourself to
Brigadier-General Marvin, and tell him all you know. He’s at Weybridge.
Know the way?”</p>
<p>“I do,” I said; and he turned his horse southward again.</p>
<p>“Half a mile, you say?” said he.</p>
<p>“At most,” I answered, and pointed over the treetops southward. He
thanked me and rode on, and we saw them no more.</p>
<p>Farther along we came upon a group of three women and two children in the road,
busy clearing out a labourer’s cottage. They had got hold of a little
hand truck, and were piling it up with unclean-looking bundles and shabby
furniture. They were all too assiduously engaged to talk to us as we passed.</p>
<p>By Byfleet station we emerged from the pine trees, and found the country calm
and peaceful under the morning sunlight. We were far beyond the range of the
Heat-Ray there, and had it not been for the silent desertion of some of the
houses, the stirring movement of packing in others, and the knot of soldiers
standing on the bridge over the railway and staring down the line towards
Woking, the day would have seemed very like any other Sunday.</p>
<p>Several farm waggons and carts were moving creakily along the road to
Addlestone, and suddenly through the gate of a field we saw, across a stretch
of flat meadow, six twelve-pounders standing neatly at equal distances pointing
towards Woking. The gunners stood by the guns waiting, and the ammunition
waggons were at a business-like distance. The men stood almost as if under
inspection.</p>
<p>“That’s good!” said I. “They will get one fair shot, at
any rate.”</p>
<p>The artilleryman hesitated at the gate.</p>
<p>“I shall go on,” he said.</p>
<p>Farther on towards Weybridge, just over the bridge, there were a number of men
in white fatigue jackets throwing up a long rampart, and more guns behind.</p>
<p>“It’s bows and arrows against the lightning, anyhow,” said
the artilleryman. “They ’aven’t seen that fire-beam
yet.”</p>
<p>The officers who were not actively engaged stood and stared over the treetops
southwestward, and the men digging would stop every now and again to stare in
the same direction.</p>
<p>Byfleet was in a tumult; people packing, and a score of hussars, some of them
dismounted, some on horseback, were hunting them about. Three or four black
government waggons, with crosses in white circles, and an old omnibus, among
other vehicles, were being loaded in the village street. There were scores of
people, most of them sufficiently sabbatical to have assumed their best
clothes. The soldiers were having the greatest difficulty in making them
realise the gravity of their position. We saw one shrivelled old fellow with a
huge box and a score or more of flower pots containing orchids, angrily
expostulating with the corporal who would leave them behind. I stopped and
gripped his arm.</p>
<p>“Do you know what’s over there?” I said, pointing at the pine
tops that hid the Martians.</p>
<p>“Eh?” said he, turning. “I was explainin’ these is
vallyble.”</p>
<p>“Death!” I shouted. “Death is coming! Death!” and
leaving him to digest that if he could, I hurried on after the artillery-man.
At the corner I looked back. The soldier had left him, and he was still
standing by his box, with the pots of orchids on the lid of it, and staring
vaguely over the trees.</p>
<p>No one in Weybridge could tell us where the headquarters were established; the
whole place was in such confusion as I had never seen in any town before.
Carts, carriages everywhere, the most astonishing miscellany of conveyances and
horseflesh. The respectable inhabitants of the place, men in golf and boating
costumes, wives prettily dressed, were packing, river-side loafers
energetically helping, children excited, and, for the most part, highly
delighted at this astonishing variation of their Sunday experiences. In the
midst of it all the worthy vicar was very pluckily holding an early
celebration, and his bell was jangling out above the excitement.</p>
<p>I and the artilleryman, seated on the step of the drinking fountain, made a
very passable meal upon what we had brought with us. Patrols of
soldiers—here no longer hussars, but grenadiers in white—were
warning people to move now or to take refuge in their cellars as soon as the
firing began. We saw as we crossed the railway bridge that a growing crowd of
people had assembled in and about the railway station, and the swarming
platform was piled with boxes and packages. The ordinary traffic had been
stopped, I believe, in order to allow of the passage of troops and guns to
Chertsey, and I have heard since that a savage struggle occurred for places in
the special trains that were put on at a later hour.</p>
<p>We remained at Weybridge until midday, and at that hour we found ourselves at
the place near Shepperton Lock where the Wey and Thames join. Part of the time
we spent helping two old women to pack a little cart. The Wey has a treble
mouth, and at this point boats are to be hired, and there was a ferry across
the river. On the Shepperton side was an inn with a lawn, and beyond that the
tower of Shepperton Church—it has been replaced by a spire—rose
above the trees.</p>
<p>Here we found an excited and noisy crowd of fugitives. As yet the flight had
not grown to a panic, but there were already far more people than all the boats
going to and fro could enable to cross. People came panting along under heavy
burdens; one husband and wife were even carrying a small outhouse door between
them, with some of their household goods piled thereon. One man told us he
meant to try to get away from Shepperton station.</p>
<p>There was a lot of shouting, and one man was even jesting. The idea people
seemed to have here was that the Martians were simply formidable human beings,
who might attack and sack the town, to be certainly destroyed in the end. Every
now and then people would glance nervously across the Wey, at the meadows
towards Chertsey, but everything over there was still.</p>
<p>Across the Thames, except just where the boats landed, everything was quiet, in
vivid contrast with the Surrey side. The people who landed there from the boats
went tramping off down the lane. The big ferryboat had just made a journey.
Three or four soldiers stood on the lawn of the inn, staring and jesting at the
fugitives, without offering to help. The inn was closed, as it was now within
prohibited hours.</p>
<p>“What’s that?” cried a boatman, and “Shut up, you
fool!” said a man near me to a yelping dog. Then the sound came again,
this time from the direction of Chertsey, a muffled thud—the sound of a
gun.</p>
<p>The fighting was beginning. Almost immediately unseen batteries across the
river to our right, unseen because of the trees, took up the chorus, firing
heavily one after the other. A woman screamed. Everyone stood arrested by the
sudden stir of battle, near us and yet invisible to us. Nothing was to be seen
save flat meadows, cows feeding unconcernedly for the most part, and silvery
pollard willows motionless in the warm sunlight.</p>
<p>“The sojers’ll stop ’em,” said a woman beside me,
doubtfully. A haziness rose over the treetops.</p>
<p>Then suddenly we saw a rush of smoke far away up the river, a puff of smoke
that jerked up into the air and hung; and forthwith the ground heaved under
foot and a heavy explosion shook the air, smashing two or three windows in the
houses near, and leaving us astonished.</p>
<p>“Here they are!” shouted a man in a blue jersey. “Yonder!
D’yer see them? Yonder!”</p>
<p>Quickly, one after the other, one, two, three, four of the armoured Martians
appeared, far away over the little trees, across the flat meadows that
stretched towards Chertsey, and striding hurriedly towards the river. Little
cowled figures they seemed at first, going with a rolling motion and as fast as
flying birds.</p>
<p>Then, advancing obliquely towards us, came a fifth. Their armoured bodies
glittered in the sun as they swept swiftly forward upon the guns, growing
rapidly larger as they drew nearer. One on the extreme left, the remotest that
is, flourished a huge case high in the air, and the ghostly, terrible Heat-Ray
I had already seen on Friday night smote towards Chertsey, and struck the town.</p>
<p>At sight of these strange, swift, and terrible creatures the crowd near the
water’s edge seemed to me to be for a moment horror-struck. There was no
screaming or shouting, but a silence. Then a hoarse murmur and a movement of
feet—a splashing from the water. A man, too frightened to drop the
portmanteau he carried on his shoulder, swung round and sent me staggering with
a blow from the corner of his burden. A woman thrust at me with her hand and
rushed past me. I turned with the rush of the people, but I was not too
terrified for thought. The terrible Heat-Ray was in my mind. To get under
water! That was it!</p>
<p>“Get under water!” I shouted, unheeded.</p>
<p>I faced about again, and rushed towards the approaching Martian, rushed right
down the gravelly beach and headlong into the water. Others did the same. A
boatload of people putting back came leaping out as I rushed past. The stones
under my feet were muddy and slippery, and the river was so low that I ran
perhaps twenty feet scarcely waist-deep. Then, as the Martian towered overhead
scarcely a couple of hundred yards away, I flung myself forward under the
surface. The splashes of the people in the boats leaping into the river sounded
like thunderclaps in my ears. People were landing hastily on both sides of the
river. But the Martian machine took no more notice for the moment of the people
running this way and that than a man would of the confusion of ants in a nest
against which his foot has kicked. When, half suffocated, I raised my head
above water, the Martian’s hood pointed at the batteries that were still
firing across the river, and as it advanced it swung loose what must have been
the generator of the Heat-Ray.</p>
<p>In another moment it was on the bank, and in a stride wading halfway across.
The knees of its foremost legs bent at the farther bank, and in another moment
it had raised itself to its full height again, close to the village of
Shepperton. Forthwith the six guns which, unknown to anyone on the right bank,
had been hidden behind the outskirts of that village, fired simultaneously. The
sudden near concussion, the last close upon the first, made my heart jump. The
monster was already raising the case generating the Heat-Ray as the first shell
burst six yards above the hood.</p>
<p>I gave a cry of astonishment. I saw and thought nothing of the other four
Martian monsters; my attention was riveted upon the nearer incident.
Simultaneously two other shells burst in the air near the body as the hood
twisted round in time to receive, but not in time to dodge, the fourth shell.</p>
<p>The shell burst clean in the face of the Thing. The hood bulged, flashed, was
whirled off in a dozen tattered fragments of red flesh and glittering metal.</p>
<p>“Hit!” shouted I, with something between a scream and a cheer.</p>
<p>I heard answering shouts from the people in the water about me. I could have
leaped out of the water with that momentary exultation.</p>
<p>The decapitated colossus reeled like a drunken giant; but it did not fall over.
It recovered its balance by a miracle, and, no longer heeding its steps and
with the camera that fired the Heat-Ray now rigidly upheld, it reeled swiftly
upon Shepperton. The living intelligence, the Martian within the hood, was
slain and splashed to the four winds of heaven, and the Thing was now but a
mere intricate device of metal whirling to destruction. It drove along in a
straight line, incapable of guidance. It struck the tower of Shepperton Church,
smashing it down as the impact of a battering ram might have done, swerved
aside, blundered on and collapsed with tremendous force into the river out of
my sight.</p>
<p>A violent explosion shook the air, and a spout of water, steam, mud, and
shattered metal shot far up into the sky. As the camera of the Heat-Ray hit the
water, the latter had immediately flashed into steam. In another moment a huge
wave, like a muddy tidal bore but almost scaldingly hot, came sweeping round
the bend upstream. I saw people struggling shorewards, and heard their
screaming and shouting faintly above the seething and roar of the
Martian’s collapse.</p>
<p>For a moment I heeded nothing of the heat, forgot the patent need of
self-preservation. I splashed through the tumultuous water, pushing aside a man
in black to do so, until I could see round the bend. Half a dozen deserted
boats pitched aimlessly upon the confusion of the waves. The fallen Martian
came into sight downstream, lying across the river, and for the most part
submerged.</p>
<p>Thick clouds of steam were pouring off the wreckage, and through the
tumultuously whirling wisps I could see, intermittently and vaguely, the
gigantic limbs churning the water and flinging a splash and spray of mud and
froth into the air. The tentacles swayed and struck like living arms, and, save
for the helpless purposelessness of these movements, it was as if some wounded
thing were struggling for its life amid the waves. Enormous quantities of a
ruddy-brown fluid were spurting up in noisy jets out of the machine.</p>
<p>My attention was diverted from this death flurry by a furious yelling, like
that of the thing called a siren in our manufacturing towns. A man, knee-deep
near the towing path, shouted inaudibly to me and pointed. Looking back, I saw
the other Martians advancing with gigantic strides down the riverbank from the
direction of Chertsey. The Shepperton guns spoke this time unavailingly.</p>
<p>At that I ducked at once under water, and, holding my breath until movement was
an agony, blundered painfully ahead under the surface as long as I could. The
water was in a tumult about me, and rapidly growing hotter.</p>
<p>When for a moment I raised my head to take breath and throw the hair and water
from my eyes, the steam was rising in a whirling white fog that at first hid
the Martians altogether. The noise was deafening. Then I saw them dimly,
colossal figures of grey, magnified by the mist. They had passed by me, and two
were stooping over the frothing, tumultuous ruins of their comrade.</p>
<p>The third and fourth stood beside him in the water, one perhaps two hundred
yards from me, the other towards Laleham. The generators of the Heat-Rays waved
high, and the hissing beams smote down this way and that.</p>
<p>The air was full of sound, a deafening and confusing conflict of
noises—the clangorous din of the Martians, the crash of falling houses,
the thud of trees, fences, sheds flashing into flame, and the crackling and
roaring of fire. Dense black smoke was leaping up to mingle with the steam from
the river, and as the Heat-Ray went to and fro over Weybridge its impact was
marked by flashes of incandescent white, that gave place at once to a smoky
dance of lurid flames. The nearer houses still stood intact, awaiting their
fate, shadowy, faint and pallid in the steam, with the fire behind them going
to and fro.</p>
<p>For a moment perhaps I stood there, breast-high in the almost boiling water,
dumbfounded at my position, hopeless of escape. Through the reek I could see
the people who had been with me in the river scrambling out of the water
through the reeds, like little frogs hurrying through grass from the advance of
a man, or running to and fro in utter dismay on the towing path.</p>
<p>Then suddenly the white flashes of the Heat-Ray came leaping towards me. The
houses caved in as they dissolved at its touch, and darted out flames; the
trees changed to fire with a roar. The Ray flickered up and down the towing
path, licking off the people who ran this way and that, and came down to the
water’s edge not fifty yards from where I stood. It swept across the
river to Shepperton, and the water in its track rose in a boiling weal crested
with steam. I turned shoreward.</p>
<p>In another moment the huge wave, well-nigh at the boiling-point had rushed upon
me. I screamed aloud, and scalded, half blinded, agonised, I staggered through
the leaping, hissing water towards the shore. Had my foot stumbled, it would
have been the end. I fell helplessly, in full sight of the Martians, upon the
broad, bare gravelly spit that runs down to mark the angle of the Wey and
Thames. I expected nothing but death.</p>
<p>I have a dim memory of the foot of a Martian coming down within a score of
yards of my head, driving straight into the loose gravel, whirling it this way
and that and lifting again; of a long suspense, and then of the four carrying
the debris of their comrade between them, now clear and then presently faint
through a veil of smoke, receding interminably, as it seemed to me, across a
vast space of river and meadow. And then, very slowly, I realised that by a
miracle I had escaped.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap13"></SPAN>XIII.<br/> HOW I FELL IN WITH THE CURATE.</h2>
<p>After getting this sudden lesson in the power of terrestrial weapons, the
Martians retreated to their original position upon Horsell Common; and in their
haste, and encumbered with the debris of their smashed companion, they no doubt
overlooked many such a stray and negligible victim as myself. Had they left
their comrade and pushed on forthwith, there was nothing at that time between
them and London but batteries of twelve-pounder guns, and they would certainly
have reached the capital in advance of the tidings of their approach; as
sudden, dreadful, and destructive their advent would have been as the
earthquake that destroyed Lisbon a century ago.</p>
<p>But they were in no hurry. Cylinder followed cylinder on its interplanetary
flight; every twenty-four hours brought them reinforcement. And meanwhile the
military and naval authorities, now fully alive to the tremendous power of
their antagonists, worked with furious energy. Every minute a fresh gun came
into position until, before twilight, every copse, every row of suburban villas
on the hilly slopes about Kingston and Richmond, masked an expectant black
muzzle. And through the charred and desolated area—perhaps twenty square
miles altogether—that encircled the Martian encampment on Horsell Common,
through charred and ruined villages among the green trees, through the
blackened and smoking arcades that had been but a day ago pine spinneys,
crawled the devoted scouts with the heliographs that were presently to warn the
gunners of the Martian approach. But the Martians now understood our command of
artillery and the danger of human proximity, and not a man ventured within a
mile of either cylinder, save at the price of his life.</p>
<p>It would seem that these giants spent the earlier part of the afternoon in
going to and fro, transferring everything from the second and third
cylinders—the second in Addlestone Golf Links and the third at
Pyrford—to their original pit on Horsell Common. Over that, above the
blackened heather and ruined buildings that stretched far and wide, stood one
as sentinel, while the rest abandoned their vast fighting-machines and
descended into the pit. They were hard at work there far into the night, and
the towering pillar of dense green smoke that rose therefrom could be seen from
the hills about Merrow, and even, it is said, from Banstead and Epsom Downs.</p>
<p>And while the Martians behind me were thus preparing for their next sally, and
in front of me Humanity gathered for the battle, I made my way with infinite
pains and labour from the fire and smoke of burning Weybridge towards London.</p>
<p>I saw an abandoned boat, very small and remote, drifting down-stream; and
throwing off the most of my sodden clothes, I went after it, gained it, and so
escaped out of that destruction. There were no oars in the boat, but I
contrived to paddle, as well as my parboiled hands would allow, down the river
towards Halliford and Walton, going very tediously and continually looking
behind me, as you may well understand. I followed the river, because I
considered that the water gave me my best chance of escape should these giants
return.</p>
<p>The hot water from the Martian’s overthrow drifted downstream with me, so
that for the best part of a mile I could see little of either bank. Once,
however, I made out a string of black figures hurrying across the meadows from
the direction of Weybridge. Halliford, it seemed, was deserted, and several of
the houses facing the river were on fire. It was strange to see the place quite
tranquil, quite desolate under the hot blue sky, with the smoke and little
threads of flame going straight up into the heat of the afternoon. Never before
had I seen houses burning without the accompaniment of an obstructive crowd. A
little farther on the dry reeds up the bank were smoking and glowing, and a
line of fire inland was marching steadily across a late field of hay.</p>
<p>For a long time I drifted, so painful and weary was I after the violence I had
been through, and so intense the heat upon the water. Then my fears got the
better of me again, and I resumed my paddling. The sun scorched my bare back.
At last, as the bridge at Walton was coming into sight round the bend, my fever
and faintness overcame my fears, and I landed on the Middlesex bank and lay
down, deadly sick, amid the long grass. I suppose the time was then about four
or five o’clock. I got up presently, walked perhaps half a mile without
meeting a soul, and then lay down again in the shadow of a hedge. I seem to
remember talking, wanderingly, to myself during that last spurt. I was also
very thirsty, and bitterly regretful I had drunk no more water. It is a curious
thing that I felt angry with my wife; I cannot account for it, but my impotent
desire to reach Leatherhead worried me excessively.</p>
<p>I do not clearly remember the arrival of the curate, so that probably I dozed.
I became aware of him as a seated figure in soot-smudged shirt sleeves, and
with his upturned, clean-shaven face staring at a faint flickering that danced
over the sky. The sky was what is called a mackerel sky—rows and rows of
faint down-plumes of cloud, just tinted with the midsummer sunset.</p>
<p>I sat up, and at the rustle of my motion he looked at me quickly.</p>
<p>“Have you any water?” I asked abruptly.</p>
<p>He shook his head.</p>
<p>“You have been asking for water for the last hour,” he said.</p>
<p>For a moment we were silent, taking stock of each other. I dare say he found me
a strange enough figure, naked, save for my water-soaked trousers and socks,
scalded, and my face and shoulders blackened by the smoke. His face was a fair
weakness, his chin retreated, and his hair lay in crisp, almost flaxen curls on
his low forehead; his eyes were rather large, pale blue, and blankly staring.
He spoke abruptly, looking vacantly away from me.</p>
<p>“What does it mean?” he said. “What do these things
mean?”</p>
<p>I stared at him and made no answer.</p>
<p>He extended a thin white hand and spoke in almost a complaining tone.</p>
<p>“Why are these things permitted? What sins have we done? The morning
service was over, I was walking through the roads to clear my brain for the
afternoon, and then—fire, earthquake, death! As if it were Sodom and
Gomorrah! All our work undone, all the work—— What are these
Martians?”</p>
<p>“What are we?” I answered, clearing my throat.</p>
<p>He gripped his knees and turned to look at me again. For half a minute,
perhaps, he stared silently.</p>
<p>“I was walking through the roads to clear my brain,” he said.
“And suddenly—fire, earthquake, death!”</p>
<p>He relapsed into silence, with his chin now sunken almost to his knees.</p>
<p>Presently he began waving his hand.</p>
<p>“All the work—all the Sunday schools—What have we
done—what has Weybridge done? Everything gone—everything destroyed.
The church! We rebuilt it only three years ago. Gone! Swept out of existence!
Why?”</p>
<p>Another pause, and he broke out again like one demented.</p>
<p>“The smoke of her burning goeth up for ever and ever!” he shouted.</p>
<p>His eyes flamed, and he pointed a lean finger in the direction of Weybridge.</p>
<p>By this time I was beginning to take his measure. The tremendous tragedy in
which he had been involved—it was evident he was a fugitive from
Weybridge—had driven him to the very verge of his reason.</p>
<p>“Are we far from Sunbury?” I said, in a matter-of-fact tone.</p>
<p>“What are we to do?” he asked. “Are these creatures
everywhere? Has the earth been given over to them?”</p>
<p>“Are we far from Sunbury?”</p>
<p>“Only this morning I officiated at early celebration——”</p>
<p>“Things have changed,” I said, quietly. “You must keep your
head. There is still hope.”</p>
<p>“Hope!”</p>
<p>“Yes. Plentiful hope—for all this destruction!”</p>
<p>I began to explain my view of our position. He listened at first, but as I went
on the interest dawning in his eyes gave place to their former stare, and his
regard wandered from me.</p>
<p>“This must be the beginning of the end,” he said, interrupting me.
“The end! The great and terrible day of the Lord! When men shall call
upon the mountains and the rocks to fall upon them and hide them—hide
them from the face of Him that sitteth upon the throne!”</p>
<p>I began to understand the position. I ceased my laboured reasoning, struggled
to my feet, and, standing over him, laid my hand on his shoulder.</p>
<p>“Be a man!” said I. “You are scared out of your wits! What
good is religion if it collapses under calamity? Think of what earthquakes and
floods, wars and volcanoes, have done before to men! Did you think God had
exempted Weybridge? He is not an insurance agent.”</p>
<p>For a time he sat in blank silence.</p>
<p>“But how can we escape?” he asked, suddenly. “They are
invulnerable, they are pitiless.”</p>
<p>“Neither the one nor, perhaps, the other,” I answered. “And
the mightier they are the more sane and wary should we be. One of them was
killed yonder not three hours ago.”</p>
<p>“Killed!” he said, staring about him. “How can God’s
ministers be killed?”</p>
<p>“I saw it happen.” I proceeded to tell him. “We have chanced
to come in for the thick of it,” said I, “and that is all.”</p>
<p>“What is that flicker in the sky?” he asked abruptly.</p>
<p>I told him it was the heliograph signalling—that it was the sign of human
help and effort in the sky.</p>
<p>“We are in the midst of it,” I said, “quiet as it is. That
flicker in the sky tells of the gathering storm. Yonder, I take it are the
Martians, and Londonward, where those hills rise about Richmond and Kingston
and the trees give cover, earthworks are being thrown up and guns are being
placed. Presently the Martians will be coming this way again.”</p>
<p>And even as I spoke he sprang to his feet and stopped me by a gesture.</p>
<p>“Listen!” he said.</p>
<p>From beyond the low hills across the water came the dull resonance of distant
guns and a remote weird crying. Then everything was still. A cockchafer came
droning over the hedge and past us. High in the west the crescent moon hung
faint and pale above the smoke of Weybridge and Shepperton and the hot, still
splendour of the sunset.</p>
<p>“We had better follow this path,” I said, “northward.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap14"></SPAN>XIV.<br/> IN LONDON.</h2>
<p>My younger brother was in London when the Martians fell at Woking. He was a
medical student working for an imminent examination, and he heard nothing of
the arrival until Saturday morning. The morning papers on Saturday contained,
in addition to lengthy special articles on the planet Mars, on life in the
planets, and so forth, a brief and vaguely worded telegram, all the more
striking for its brevity.</p>
<p>The Martians, alarmed by the approach of a crowd, had killed a number of people
with a quick-firing gun, so the story ran. The telegram concluded with the
words: “Formidable as they seem to be, the Martians have not moved from
the pit into which they have fallen, and, indeed, seem incapable of doing so.
Probably this is due to the relative strength of the earth’s
gravitational energy.” On that last text their leader-writer expanded
very comfortingly.</p>
<p>Of course all the students in the crammer’s biology class, to which my
brother went that day, were intensely interested, but there were no signs of
any unusual excitement in the streets. The afternoon papers puffed scraps of
news under big headlines. They had nothing to tell beyond the movements of
troops about the common, and the burning of the pine woods between Woking and
Weybridge, until eight. Then the <i>St. James’s Gazette</i>, in an
extra-special edition, announced the bare fact of the interruption of
telegraphic communication. This was thought to be due to the falling of burning
pine trees across the line. Nothing more of the fighting was known that night,
the night of my drive to Leatherhead and back.</p>
<p>My brother felt no anxiety about us, as he knew from the description in the
papers that the cylinder was a good two miles from my house. He made up his
mind to run down that night to me, in order, as he says, to see the Things
before they were killed. He dispatched a telegram, which never reached me,
about four o’clock, and spent the evening at a music hall.</p>
<p>In London, also, on Saturday night there was a thunderstorm, and my brother
reached Waterloo in a cab. On the platform from which the midnight train
usually starts he learned, after some waiting, that an accident prevented
trains from reaching Woking that night. The nature of the accident he could not
ascertain; indeed, the railway authorities did not clearly know at that time.
There was very little excitement in the station, as the officials, failing to
realise that anything further than a breakdown between Byfleet and Woking
junction had occurred, were running the theatre trains which usually passed
through Woking round by Virginia Water or Guildford. They were busy making the
necessary arrangements to alter the route of the Southampton and Portsmouth
Sunday League excursions. A nocturnal newspaper reporter, mistaking my brother
for the traffic manager, to whom he bears a slight resemblance, waylaid and
tried to interview him. Few people, excepting the railway officials, connected
the breakdown with the Martians.</p>
<p>I have read, in another account of these events, that on Sunday morning
“all London was electrified by the news from Woking.” As a matter
of fact, there was nothing to justify that very extravagant phrase. Plenty of
Londoners did not hear of the Martians until the panic of Monday morning. Those
who did took some time to realise all that the hastily worded telegrams in the
Sunday papers conveyed. The majority of people in London do not read Sunday
papers.</p>
<p>The habit of personal security, moreover, is so deeply fixed in the
Londoner’s mind, and startling intelligence so much a matter of course in
the papers, that they could read without any personal tremors: “About
seven o’clock last night the Martians came out of the cylinder, and,
moving about under an armour of metallic shields, have completely wrecked
Woking station with the adjacent houses, and massacred an entire battalion of
the Cardigan Regiment. No details are known. Maxims have been absolutely
useless against their armour; the field guns have been disabled by them. Flying
hussars have been galloping into Chertsey. The Martians appear to be moving
slowly towards Chertsey or Windsor. Great anxiety prevails in West Surrey, and
earthworks are being thrown up to check the advance Londonward.” That was
how the <i>Sunday Sun</i> put it, and a clever and remarkably prompt
“handbook” article in the <i>Referee</i> compared the affair to a
menagerie suddenly let loose in a village.</p>
<p>No one in London knew positively of the nature of the armoured Martians, and
there was still a fixed idea that these monsters must be sluggish:
“crawling,” “creeping painfully”—such expressions
occurred in almost all the earlier reports. None of the telegrams could have
been written by an eyewitness of their advance. The Sunday papers printed
separate editions as further news came to hand, some even in default of it. But
there was practically nothing more to tell people until late in the afternoon,
when the authorities gave the press agencies the news in their possession. It
was stated that the people of Walton and Weybridge, and all the district were
pouring along the roads Londonward, and that was all.</p>
<p>My brother went to church at the Foundling Hospital in the morning, still in
ignorance of what had happened on the previous night. There he heard allusions
made to the invasion, and a special prayer for peace. Coming out, he bought a
<i>Referee</i>. He became alarmed at the news in this, and went again to
Waterloo station to find out if communication were restored. The omnibuses,
carriages, cyclists, and innumerable people walking in their best clothes
seemed scarcely affected by the strange intelligence that the newsvendors were
disseminating. People were interested, or, if alarmed, alarmed only on account
of the local residents. At the station he heard for the first time that the
Windsor and Chertsey lines were now interrupted. The porters told him that
several remarkable telegrams had been received in the morning from Byfleet and
Chertsey stations, but that these had abruptly ceased. My brother could get
very little precise detail out of them.</p>
<p>“There’s fighting going on about Weybridge” was the extent of
their information.</p>
<p>The train service was now very much disorganised. Quite a number of people who
had been expecting friends from places on the South-Western network were
standing about the station. One grey-headed old gentleman came and abused the
South-Western Company bitterly to my brother. “It wants showing
up,” he said.</p>
<p>One or two trains came in from Richmond, Putney, and Kingston, containing
people who had gone out for a day’s boating and found the locks closed
and a feeling of panic in the air. A man in a blue and white blazer addressed
my brother, full of strange tidings.</p>
<p>“There’s hosts of people driving into Kingston in traps and carts
and things, with boxes of valuables and all that,” he said. “They
come from Molesey and Weybridge and Walton, and they say there’s been
guns heard at Chertsey, heavy firing, and that mounted soldiers have told them
to get off at once because the Martians are coming. We heard guns firing at
Hampton Court station, but we thought it was thunder. What the dickens does it
all mean? The Martians can’t get out of their pit, can they?”</p>
<p>My brother could not tell him.</p>
<p>Afterwards he found that the vague feeling of alarm had spread to the clients
of the underground railway, and that the Sunday excursionists began to return
from all over the South-Western “lung”—Barnes, Wimbledon,
Richmond Park, Kew, and so forth—at unnaturally early hours; but not a
soul had anything more than vague hearsay to tell of. Everyone connected with
the terminus seemed ill-tempered.</p>
<p>About five o’clock the gathering crowd in the station was immensely
excited by the opening of the line of communication, which is almost invariably
closed, between the South-Eastern and the South-Western stations, and the
passage of carriage trucks bearing huge guns and carriages crammed with
soldiers. These were the guns that were brought up from Woolwich and Chatham to
cover Kingston. There was an exchange of pleasantries: “You’ll get
eaten!” “We’re the beast-tamers!” and so forth. A
little while after that a squad of police came into the station and began to
clear the public off the platforms, and my brother went out into the street
again.</p>
<p>The church bells were ringing for evensong, and a squad of Salvation Army
lassies came singing down Waterloo Road. On the bridge a number of loafers were
watching a curious brown scum that came drifting down the stream in patches.
The sun was just setting, and the Clock Tower and the Houses of Parliament rose
against one of the most peaceful skies it is possible to imagine, a sky of
gold, barred with long transverse stripes of reddish-purple cloud. There was
talk of a floating body. One of the men there, a reservist he said he was, told
my brother he had seen the heliograph flickering in the west.</p>
<p>In Wellington Street my brother met a couple of sturdy roughs who had just been
rushed out of Fleet Street with still-wet newspapers and staring placards.
“Dreadful catastrophe!” they bawled one to the other down
Wellington Street. “Fighting at Weybridge! Full description! Repulse of
the Martians! London in Danger!” He had to give threepence for a copy of
that paper.</p>
<p>Then it was, and then only, that he realised something of the full power and
terror of these monsters. He learned that they were not merely a handful of
small sluggish creatures, but that they were minds swaying vast mechanical
bodies; and that they could move swiftly and smite with such power that even
the mightiest guns could not stand against them.</p>
<p>They were described as “vast spiderlike machines, nearly a hundred feet
high, capable of the speed of an express train, and able to shoot out a beam of
intense heat.” Masked batteries, chiefly of field guns, had been planted
in the country about Horsell Common, and especially between the Woking district
and London. Five of the machines had been seen moving towards the Thames, and
one, by a happy chance, had been destroyed. In the other cases the shells had
missed, and the batteries had been at once annihilated by the Heat-Rays. Heavy
losses of soldiers were mentioned, but the tone of the dispatch was optimistic.</p>
<p>The Martians had been repulsed; they were not invulnerable. They had retreated
to their triangle of cylinders again, in the circle about Woking. Signallers
with heliographs were pushing forward upon them from all sides. Guns were in
rapid transit from Windsor, Portsmouth, Aldershot, Woolwich—even from the
north; among others, long wire-guns of ninety-five tons from Woolwich.
Altogether one hundred and sixteen were in position or being hastily placed,
chiefly covering London. Never before in England had there been such a vast or
rapid concentration of military material.</p>
<p>Any further cylinders that fell, it was hoped, could be destroyed at once by
high explosives, which were being rapidly manufactured and distributed. No
doubt, ran the report, the situation was of the strangest and gravest
description, but the public was exhorted to avoid and discourage panic. No
doubt the Martians were strange and terrible in the extreme, but at the outside
there could not be more than twenty of them against our millions.</p>
<p>The authorities had reason to suppose, from the size of the cylinders, that at
the outside there could not be more than five in each cylinder—fifteen
altogether. And one at least was disposed of—perhaps more. The public
would be fairly warned of the approach of danger, and elaborate measures were
being taken for the protection of the people in the threatened southwestern
suburbs. And so, with reiterated assurances of the safety of London and the
ability of the authorities to cope with the difficulty, this quasi-proclamation
closed.</p>
<p>This was printed in enormous type on paper so fresh that it was still wet, and
there had been no time to add a word of comment. It was curious, my brother
said, to see how ruthlessly the usual contents of the paper had been hacked and
taken out to give this place.</p>
<p>All down Wellington Street people could be seen fluttering out the pink sheets
and reading, and the Strand was suddenly noisy with the voices of an army of
hawkers following these pioneers. Men came scrambling off buses to secure
copies. Certainly this news excited people intensely, whatever their previous
apathy. The shutters of a map shop in the Strand were being taken down, my
brother said, and a man in his Sunday raiment, lemon-yellow gloves even, was
visible inside the window hastily fastening maps of Surrey to the glass.</p>
<p>Going on along the Strand to Trafalgar Square, the paper in his hand, my
brother saw some of the fugitives from West Surrey. There was a man with his
wife and two boys and some articles of furniture in a cart such as greengrocers
use. He was driving from the direction of Westminster Bridge; and close behind
him came a hay waggon with five or six respectable-looking people in it, and
some boxes and bundles. The faces of these people were haggard, and their
entire appearance contrasted conspicuously with the Sabbath-best appearance of
the people on the omnibuses. People in fashionable clothing peeped at them out
of cabs. They stopped at the Square as if undecided which way to take, and
finally turned eastward along the Strand. Some way behind these came a man in
workday clothes, riding one of those old-fashioned tricycles with a small front
wheel. He was dirty and white in the face.</p>
<p>My brother turned down towards Victoria, and met a number of such people. He
had a vague idea that he might see something of me. He noticed an unusual
number of police regulating the traffic. Some of the refugees were exchanging
news with the people on the omnibuses. One was professing to have seen the
Martians. “Boilers on stilts, I tell you, striding along like men.”
Most of them were excited and animated by their strange experience.</p>
<p>Beyond Victoria the public-houses were doing a lively trade with these
arrivals. At all the street corners groups of people were reading papers,
talking excitedly, or staring at these unusual Sunday visitors. They seemed to
increase as night drew on, until at last the roads, my brother said, were like
Epsom High Street on a Derby Day. My brother addressed several of these
fugitives and got unsatisfactory answers from most.</p>
<p>None of them could tell him any news of Woking except one man, who assured him
that Woking had been entirely destroyed on the previous night.</p>
<p>“I come from Byfleet,” he said; “a man on a bicycle came
through the place in the early morning, and ran from door to door warning us to
come away. Then came soldiers. We went out to look, and there were clouds of
smoke to the south—nothing but smoke, and not a soul coming that way.
Then we heard the guns at Chertsey, and folks coming from Weybridge. So
I’ve locked up my house and come on.”</p>
<p>At that time there was a strong feeling in the streets that the authorities were
to blame for their incapacity to dispose of the invaders without all this
inconvenience.</p>
<p>About eight o’clock a noise of heavy firing was distinctly audible all
over the south of London. My brother could not hear it for the traffic in the
main thoroughfares, but by striking through the quiet back streets to the river
he was able to distinguish it quite plainly.</p>
<p>He walked from Westminster to his apartments near Regent’s Park, about
two. He was now very anxious on my account, and disturbed at the evident
magnitude of the trouble. His mind was inclined to run, even as mine had run on
Saturday, on military details. He thought of all those silent, expectant guns,
of the suddenly nomadic countryside; he tried to imagine “boilers on
stilts” a hundred feet high.</p>
<p>There were one or two cartloads of refugees passing along Oxford Street, and
several in the Marylebone Road, but so slowly was the news spreading that
Regent Street and Portland Place were full of their usual Sunday-night
promenaders, albeit they talked in groups, and along the edge of Regent’s
Park there were as many silent couples “walking out” together under
the scattered gas lamps as ever there had been. The night was warm and still,
and a little oppressive; the sound of guns continued intermittently, and after
midnight there seemed to be sheet lightning in the south.</p>
<p>He read and re-read the paper, fearing the worst had happened to me. He was
restless, and after supper prowled out again aimlessly. He returned and tried
in vain to divert his attention to his examination notes. He went to bed a
little after midnight, and was awakened from lurid dreams in the small hours of
Monday by the sound of door knockers, feet running in the street, distant
drumming, and a clamour of bells. Red reflections danced on the ceiling. For a
moment he lay astonished, wondering whether day had come or the world gone mad.
Then he jumped out of bed and ran to the window.</p>
<p>His room was an attic and as he thrust his head out, up and down the street
there were a dozen echoes to the noise of his window sash, and heads in every
kind of night disarray appeared. Enquiries were being shouted. “They are
coming!” bawled a policeman, hammering at the door; “the Martians
are coming!” and hurried to the next door.</p>
<p>The sound of drumming and trumpeting came from the Albany Street Barracks, and
every church within earshot was hard at work killing sleep with a vehement
disorderly tocsin. There was a noise of doors opening, and window after window
in the houses opposite flashed from darkness into yellow illumination.</p>
<p>Up the street came galloping a closed carriage, bursting abruptly into noise at
the corner, rising to a clattering climax under the window, and dying away
slowly in the distance. Close on the rear of this came a couple of cabs, the
forerunners of a long procession of flying vehicles, going for the most part to
Chalk Farm station, where the North-Western special trains were loading up,
instead of coming down the gradient into Euston.</p>
<p>For a long time my brother stared out of the window in blank astonishment,
watching the policemen hammering at door after door, and delivering their
incomprehensible message. Then the door behind him opened, and the man who
lodged across the landing came in, dressed only in shirt, trousers, and
slippers, his braces loose about his waist, his hair disordered from his
pillow.</p>
<p>“What the devil is it?” he asked. “A fire? What a devil of a
row!”</p>
<p>They both craned their heads out of the window, straining to hear what the
policemen were shouting. People were coming out of the side streets, and
standing in groups at the corners talking.</p>
<p>“What the devil is it all about?” said my brother’s fellow
lodger.</p>
<p>My brother answered him vaguely and began to dress, running with each garment
to the window in order to miss nothing of the growing excitement. And presently
men selling unnaturally early newspapers came bawling into the street:</p>
<p>“London in danger of suffocation! The Kingston and Richmond defences
forced! Fearful massacres in the Thames Valley!”</p>
<p>And all about him—in the rooms below, in the houses on each side and
across the road, and behind in the Park Terraces and in the hundred other
streets of that part of Marylebone, and the Westbourne Park district and St.
Pancras, and westward and northward in Kilburn and St. John’s Wood and
Hampstead, and eastward in Shoreditch and Highbury and Haggerston and Hoxton,
and, indeed, through all the vastness of London from Ealing to East
Ham—people were rubbing their eyes, and opening windows to stare out and
ask aimless questions, dressing hastily as the first breath of the coming storm
of Fear blew through the streets. It was the dawn of the great panic. London,
which had gone to bed on Sunday night oblivious and inert, was awakened, in the
small hours of Monday morning, to a vivid sense of danger.</p>
<p>Unable from his window to learn what was happening, my brother went down and
out into the street, just as the sky between the parapets of the houses grew
pink with the early dawn. The flying people on foot and in vehicles grew more
numerous every moment. “Black Smoke!” he heard people crying, and
again “Black Smoke!” The contagion of such a unanimous fear was
inevitable. As my brother hesitated on the door-step, he saw another newsvendor
approaching, and got a paper forthwith. The man was running away with the rest,
and selling his papers for a shilling each as he ran—a grotesque mingling
of profit and panic.</p>
<p>And from this paper my brother read that catastrophic dispatch of the
Commander-in-Chief:</p>
<p class="letter">
“The Martians are able to discharge enormous clouds of a black and
poisonous vapour by means of rockets. They have smothered our batteries,
destroyed Richmond, Kingston, and Wimbledon, and are advancing slowly towards
London, destroying everything on the way. It is impossible to stop them. There
is no safety from the Black Smoke but in instant flight.”</p>
<p>That was all, but it was enough. The whole population of the great six-million
city was stirring, slipping, running; presently it would be pouring <i>en
masse</i> northward.</p>
<p>“Black Smoke!” the voices cried. “Fire!”</p>
<p>The bells of the neighbouring church made a jangling tumult, a cart carelessly
driven smashed, amid shrieks and curses, against the water trough up the
street. Sickly yellow lights went to and fro in the houses, and some of the
passing cabs flaunted unextinguished lamps. And overhead the dawn was growing
brighter, clear and steady and calm.</p>
<p>He heard footsteps running to and fro in the rooms, and up and down stairs
behind him. His landlady came to the door, loosely wrapped in dressing gown and
shawl; her husband followed, ejaculating.</p>
<p>As my brother began to realise the import of all these things, he turned
hastily to his own room, put all his available money—some ten pounds
altogether—into his pockets, and went out again into the streets.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN>XV.<br/> WHAT HAD HAPPENED IN SURREY.</h2>
<p>It was while the curate had sat and talked so wildly to me under the hedge in
the flat meadows near Halliford, and while my brother was watching the
fugitives stream over Westminster Bridge, that the Martians had resumed the
offensive. So far as one can ascertain from the conflicting accounts that have
been put forth, the majority of them remained busied with preparations in the
Horsell pit until nine that night, hurrying on some operation that disengaged
huge volumes of green smoke.</p>
<p>But three certainly came out about eight o’clock and, advancing slowly
and cautiously, made their way through Byfleet and Pyrford towards Ripley and
Weybridge, and so came in sight of the expectant batteries against the setting
sun. These Martians did not advance in a body, but in a line, each perhaps a
mile and a half from his nearest fellow. They communicated with one another by
means of sirenlike howls, running up and down the scale from one note to
another.</p>
<p>It was this howling and firing of the guns at Ripley and St. George’s
Hill that we had heard at Upper Halliford. The Ripley gunners, unseasoned
artillery volunteers who ought never to have been placed in such a position,
fired one wild, premature, ineffectual volley, and bolted on horse and foot
through the deserted village, while the Martian, without using his Heat-Ray,
walked serenely over their guns, stepped gingerly among them, passed in front
of them, and so came unexpectedly upon the guns in Painshill Park, which he
destroyed.</p>
<p>The St. George’s Hill men, however, were better led or of a better
mettle. Hidden by a pine wood as they were, they seem to have been quite
unsuspected by the Martian nearest to them. They laid their guns as
deliberately as if they had been on parade, and fired at about a thousand
yards’ range.</p>
<p>The shells flashed all round him, and he was seen to advance a few paces,
stagger, and go down. Everybody yelled together, and the guns were reloaded in
frantic haste. The overthrown Martian set up a prolonged ululation, and
immediately a second glittering giant, answering him, appeared over the trees
to the south. It would seem that a leg of the tripod had been smashed by one of
the shells. The whole of the second volley flew wide of the Martian on the
ground, and, simultaneously, both his companions brought their Heat-Rays to
bear on the battery. The ammunition blew up, the pine trees all about the guns
flashed into fire, and only one or two of the men who were already running over
the crest of the hill escaped.</p>
<p>After this it would seem that the three took counsel together and halted, and
the scouts who were watching them report that they remained absolutely
stationary for the next half hour. The Martian who had been overthrown crawled
tediously out of his hood, a small brown figure, oddly suggestive from that
distance of a speck of blight, and apparently engaged in the repair of his
support. About nine he had finished, for his cowl was then seen above the trees
again.</p>
<p>It was a few minutes past nine that night when these three sentinels were
joined by four other Martians, each carrying a thick black tube. A similar tube
was handed to each of the three, and the seven proceeded to distribute
themselves at equal distances along a curved line between St. George’s
Hill, Weybridge, and the village of Send, southwest of Ripley.</p>
<p>A dozen rockets sprang out of the hills before them so soon as they began to
move, and warned the waiting batteries about Ditton and Esher. At the same time
four of their fighting machines, similarly armed with tubes, crossed the river,
and two of them, black against the western sky, came into sight of myself and
the curate as we hurried wearily and painfully along the road that runs
northward out of Halliford. They moved, as it seemed to us, upon a cloud, for a
milky mist covered the fields and rose to a third of their height.</p>
<p>At this sight the curate cried faintly in his throat, and began running; but I
knew it was no good running from a Martian, and I turned aside and crawled
through dewy nettles and brambles into the broad ditch by the side of the road.
He looked back, saw what I was doing, and turned to join me.</p>
<p>The two halted, the nearer to us standing and facing Sunbury, the remoter being
a grey indistinctness towards the evening star, away towards Staines.</p>
<p>The occasional howling of the Martians had ceased; they took up their positions
in the huge crescent about their cylinders in absolute silence. It was a
crescent with twelve miles between its horns. Never since the devising of
gunpowder was the beginning of a battle so still. To us and to an observer
about Ripley it would have had precisely the same effect—the Martians
seemed in solitary possession of the darkling night, lit only as it was by the
slender moon, the stars, the afterglow of the daylight, and the ruddy glare
from St. George’s Hill and the woods of Painshill.</p>
<p>But facing that crescent everywhere—at Staines, Hounslow, Ditton, Esher,
Ockham, behind hills and woods south of the river, and across the flat grass
meadows to the north of it, wherever a cluster of trees or village houses gave
sufficient cover—the guns were waiting. The signal rockets burst and
rained their sparks through the night and vanished, and the spirit of all those
watching batteries rose to a tense expectation. The Martians had but to advance
into the line of fire, and instantly those motionless black forms of men, those
guns glittering so darkly in the early night, would explode into a thunderous
fury of battle.</p>
<p>No doubt the thought that was uppermost in a thousand of those vigilant minds,
even as it was uppermost in mine, was the riddle—how much they understood
of us. Did they grasp that we in our millions were organized, disciplined,
working together? Or did they interpret our spurts of fire, the sudden stinging
of our shells, our steady investment of their encampment, as we should the
furious unanimity of onslaught in a disturbed hive of bees? Did they dream they
might exterminate us? (At that time no one knew what food they needed.) A
hundred such questions struggled together in my mind as I watched that vast
sentinel shape. And in the back of my mind was the sense of all the huge
unknown and hidden forces Londonward. Had they prepared pitfalls? Were the
powder mills at Hounslow ready as a snare? Would the Londoners have the heart
and courage to make a greater Moscow of their mighty province of houses?</p>
<p>Then, after an interminable time, as it seemed to us, crouching and peering
through the hedge, came a sound like the distant concussion of a gun. Another
nearer, and then another. And then the Martian beside us raised his tube on
high and discharged it, gunwise, with a heavy report that made the ground
heave. The one towards Staines answered him. There was no flash, no smoke,
simply that loaded detonation.</p>
<p>I was so excited by these heavy minute-guns following one another that I so far
forgot my personal safety and my scalded hands as to clamber up into the hedge
and stare towards Sunbury. As I did so a second report followed, and a big
projectile hurtled overhead towards Hounslow. I expected at least to see smoke
or fire, or some such evidence of its work. But all I saw was the deep blue sky
above, with one solitary star, and the white mist spreading wide and low
beneath. And there had been no crash, no answering explosion. The silence was
restored; the minute lengthened to three.</p>
<p>“What has happened?” said the curate, standing up beside me.</p>
<p>“Heaven knows!” said I.</p>
<p>A bat flickered by and vanished. A distant tumult of shouting began and ceased.
I looked again at the Martian, and saw he was now moving eastward along the
riverbank, with a swift, rolling motion.</p>
<p>Every moment I expected the fire of some hidden battery to spring upon him; but
the evening calm was unbroken. The figure of the Martian grew smaller as he
receded, and presently the mist and the gathering night had swallowed him up.
By a common impulse we clambered higher. Towards Sunbury was a dark appearance,
as though a conical hill had suddenly come into being there, hiding our view of
the farther country; and then, remoter across the river, over Walton, we saw
another such summit. These hill-like forms grew lower and broader even as we
stared.</p>
<p>Moved by a sudden thought, I looked northward, and there I perceived a third of
these cloudy black kopjes had risen.</p>
<p>Everything had suddenly become very still. Far away to the southeast, marking
the quiet, we heard the Martians hooting to one another, and then the air
quivered again with the distant thud of their guns. But the earthly artillery
made no reply.</p>
<p>Now at the time we could not understand these things, but later I was to learn
the meaning of these ominous kopjes that gathered in the twilight. Each of the
Martians, standing in the great crescent I have described, had discharged, by
means of the gunlike tube he carried, a huge canister over whatever hill,
copse, cluster of houses, or other possible cover for guns, chanced to be in
front of him. Some fired only one of these, some two—as in the case of
the one we had seen; the one at Ripley is said to have discharged no fewer than
five at that time. These canisters smashed on striking the ground—they
did not explode—and incontinently disengaged an enormous volume of heavy,
inky vapour, coiling and pouring upward in a huge and ebony cumulus cloud, a
gaseous hill that sank and spread itself slowly over the surrounding country.
And the touch of that vapour, the inhaling of its pungent wisps, was death to
all that breathes.</p>
<p>It was heavy, this vapour, heavier than the densest smoke, so that, after the
first tumultuous uprush and outflow of its impact, it sank down through the air
and poured over the ground in a manner rather liquid than gaseous, abandoning
the hills, and streaming into the valleys and ditches and watercourses even as
I have heard the carbonic-acid gas that pours from volcanic clefts is wont to
do. And where it came upon water some chemical action occurred, and the surface
would be instantly covered with a powdery scum that sank slowly and made way
for more. The scum was absolutely insoluble, and it is a strange thing, seeing
the instant effect of the gas, that one could drink without hurt the water from
which it had been strained. The vapour did not diffuse as a true gas would do.
It hung together in banks, flowing sluggishly down the slope of the land and
driving reluctantly before the wind, and very slowly it combined with the mist
and moisture of the air, and sank to the earth in the form of dust. Save that
an unknown element giving a group of four lines in the blue of the spectrum is
concerned, we are still entirely ignorant of the nature of this substance.</p>
<p>Once the tumultuous upheaval of its dispersion was over, the black smoke clung
so closely to the ground, even before its precipitation, that fifty feet up in
the air, on the roofs and upper stories of high houses and on great trees,
there was a chance of escaping its poison altogether, as was proved even that
night at Street Cobham and Ditton.</p>
<p>The man who escaped at the former place tells a wonderful story of the
strangeness of its coiling flow, and how he looked down from the church spire
and saw the houses of the village rising like ghosts out of its inky
nothingness. For a day and a half he remained there, weary, starving and
sun-scorched, the earth under the blue sky and against the prospect of the
distant hills a velvet-black expanse, with red roofs, green trees, and, later,
black-veiled shrubs and gates, barns, outhouses, and walls, rising here and
there into the sunlight.</p>
<p>But that was at Street Cobham, where the black vapour was allowed to remain
until it sank of its own accord into the ground. As a rule the Martians, when
it had served its purpose, cleared the air of it again by wading into it and
directing a jet of steam upon it.</p>
<p>This they did with the vapour banks near us, as we saw in the starlight from
the window of a deserted house at Upper Halliford, whither we had returned.
From there we could see the searchlights on Richmond Hill and Kingston Hill
going to and fro, and about eleven the windows rattled, and we heard the sound
of the huge siege guns that had been put in position there. These continued
intermittently for the space of a quarter of an hour, sending chance shots at
the invisible Martians at Hampton and Ditton, and then the pale beams of the
electric light vanished, and were replaced by a bright red glow.</p>
<p>Then the fourth cylinder fell—a brilliant green meteor—as I learned
afterwards, in Bushey Park. Before the guns on the Richmond and Kingston line
of hills began, there was a fitful cannonade far away in the southwest, due, I
believe, to guns being fired haphazard before the black vapour could overwhelm
the gunners.</p>
<p>So, setting about it as methodically as men might smoke out a wasps’
nest, the Martians spread this strange stifling vapour over the Londonward
country. The horns of the crescent slowly moved apart, until at last they
formed a line from Hanwell to Coombe and Malden. All night through their
destructive tubes advanced. Never once, after the Martian at St. George’s
Hill was brought down, did they give the artillery the ghost of a chance
against them. Wherever there was a possibility of guns being laid for them
unseen, a fresh canister of the black vapour was discharged, and where the guns
were openly displayed the Heat-Ray was brought to bear.</p>
<p>By midnight the blazing trees along the slopes of Richmond Park and the glare
of Kingston Hill threw their light upon a network of black smoke, blotting out
the whole valley of the Thames and extending as far as the eye could reach. And
through this two Martians slowly waded, and turned their hissing steam jets
this way and that.</p>
<p>They were sparing of the Heat-Ray that night, either because they had but a
limited supply of material for its production or because they did not wish to
destroy the country but only to crush and overawe the opposition they had
aroused. In the latter aim they certainly succeeded. Sunday night was the end
of the organised opposition to their movements. After that no body of men would
stand against them, so hopeless was the enterprise. Even the crews of the
torpedo-boats and destroyers that had brought their quick-firers up the Thames
refused to stop, mutinied, and went down again. The only offensive operation
men ventured upon after that night was the preparation of mines and pitfalls,
and even in that their energies were frantic and spasmodic.</p>
<p>One has to imagine, as well as one may, the fate of those batteries towards
Esher, waiting so tensely in the twilight. Survivors there were none. One may
picture the orderly expectation, the officers alert and watchful, the gunners
ready, the ammunition piled to hand, the limber gunners with their horses and
waggons, the groups of civilian spectators standing as near as they were
permitted, the evening stillness, the ambulances and hospital tents with the
burned and wounded from Weybridge; then the dull resonance of the shots the
Martians fired, and the clumsy projectile whirling over the trees and houses
and smashing amid the neighbouring fields.</p>
<p>One may picture, too, the sudden shifting of the attention, the swiftly
spreading coils and bellyings of that blackness advancing headlong, towering
heavenward, turning the twilight to a palpable darkness, a strange and horrible
antagonist of vapour striding upon its victims, men and horses near it seen
dimly, running, shrieking, falling headlong, shouts of dismay, the guns
suddenly abandoned, men choking and writhing on the ground, and the swift
broadening-out of the opaque cone of smoke. And then night and
extinction—nothing but a silent mass of impenetrable vapour hiding its
dead.</p>
<p>Before dawn the black vapour was pouring through the streets of Richmond, and
the disintegrating organism of government was, with a last expiring effort,
rousing the population of London to the necessity of flight.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap16"></SPAN>XVI.<br/> THE EXODUS FROM LONDON.</h2>
<p>So you understand the roaring wave of fear that swept through the greatest city
in the world just as Monday was dawning—the stream of flight rising
swiftly to a torrent, lashing in a foaming tumult round the railway stations,
banked up into a horrible struggle about the shipping in the Thames, and
hurrying by every available channel northward and eastward. By ten
o’clock the police organisation, and by midday even the railway
organisations, were losing coherency, losing shape and efficiency, guttering,
softening, running at last in that swift liquefaction of the social body.</p>
<p>All the railway lines north of the Thames and the South-Eastern people at
Cannon Street had been warned by midnight on Sunday, and trains were being
filled. People were fighting savagely for standing-room in the carriages even
at two o’clock. By three, people were being trampled and crushed even in
Bishopsgate Street, a couple of hundred yards or more from Liverpool Street
station; revolvers were fired, people stabbed, and the policemen who had been
sent to direct the traffic, exhausted and infuriated, were breaking the heads
of the people they were called out to protect.</p>
<p>And as the day advanced and the engine drivers and stokers refused to return to
London, the pressure of the flight drove the people in an ever-thickening
multitude away from the stations and along the northward-running roads. By
midday a Martian had been seen at Barnes, and a cloud of slowly sinking black
vapour drove along the Thames and across the flats of Lambeth, cutting off all
escape over the bridges in its sluggish advance. Another bank drove over
Ealing, and surrounded a little island of survivors on Castle Hill, alive, but
unable to escape.</p>
<p>After a fruitless struggle to get aboard a North-Western train at Chalk
Farm—the engines of the trains that had loaded in the goods yard there
<i>ploughed</i> through shrieking people, and a dozen stalwart men fought to
keep the crowd from crushing the driver against his furnace—my brother
emerged upon the Chalk Farm road, dodged across through a hurrying swarm of
vehicles, and had the luck to be foremost in the sack of a cycle shop. The
front tire of the machine he got was punctured in dragging it through the
window, but he got up and off, notwithstanding, with no further injury than a
cut wrist. The steep foot of Haverstock Hill was impassable owing to several
overturned horses, and my brother struck into Belsize Road.</p>
<p>So he got out of the fury of the panic, and, skirting the Edgware Road, reached
Edgware about seven, fasting and wearied, but well ahead of the crowd. Along
the road people were standing in the roadway, curious, wondering. He was passed
by a number of cyclists, some horsemen, and two motor cars. A mile from Edgware
the rim of the wheel broke, and the machine became unridable. He left it by the
roadside and trudged through the village. There were shops half opened in the
main street of the place, and people crowded on the pavement and in the
doorways and windows, staring astonished at this extraordinary procession of
fugitives that was beginning. He succeeded in getting some food at an inn.</p>
<p>For a time he remained in Edgware not knowing what next to do. The flying
people increased in number. Many of them, like my brother, seemed inclined to
loiter in the place. There was no fresh news of the invaders from Mars.</p>
<p>At that time the road was crowded, but as yet far from congested. Most of the
fugitives at that hour were mounted on cycles, but there were soon motor cars,
hansom cabs, and carriages hurrying along, and the dust hung in heavy clouds
along the road to St. Albans.</p>
<p>It was perhaps a vague idea of making his way to Chelmsford, where some friends
of his lived, that at last induced my brother to strike into a quiet lane
running eastward. Presently he came upon a stile, and, crossing it, followed a
footpath northeastward. He passed near several farmhouses and some little
places whose names he did not learn. He saw few fugitives until, in a grass
lane towards High Barnet, he happened upon two ladies who became his fellow
travellers. He came upon them just in time to save them.</p>
<p>He heard their screams, and, hurrying round the corner, saw a couple of men
struggling to drag them out of the little pony-chaise in which they had been
driving, while a third with difficulty held the frightened pony’s head.
One of the ladies, a short woman dressed in white, was simply screaming; the
other, a dark, slender figure, slashed at the man who gripped her arm with a
whip she held in her disengaged hand.</p>
<p>My brother immediately grasped the situation, shouted, and hurried towards the
struggle. One of the men desisted and turned towards him, and my brother,
realising from his antagonist’s face that a fight was unavoidable, and
being an expert boxer, went into him forthwith and sent him down against the
wheel of the chaise.</p>
<p>It was no time for pugilistic chivalry and my brother laid him quiet with a
kick, and gripped the collar of the man who pulled at the slender lady’s
arm. He heard the clatter of hoofs, the whip stung across his face, a third
antagonist struck him between the eyes, and the man he held wrenched himself
free and made off down the lane in the direction from which he had come.</p>
<p>Partly stunned, he found himself facing the man who had held the horse’s
head, and became aware of the chaise receding from him down the lane, swaying
from side to side, and with the women in it looking back. The man before him, a
burly rough, tried to close, and he stopped him with a blow in the face. Then,
realising that he was deserted, he dodged round and made off down the lane
after the chaise, with the sturdy man close behind him, and the fugitive, who
had turned now, following remotely.</p>
<p>Suddenly he stumbled and fell; his immediate pursuer went headlong, and he rose
to his feet to find himself with a couple of antagonists again. He would have
had little chance against them had not the slender lady very pluckily pulled up
and returned to his help. It seems she had had a revolver all this time, but it
had been under the seat when she and her companion were attacked. She fired at
six yards’ distance, narrowly missing my brother. The less courageous of
the robbers made off, and his companion followed him, cursing his cowardice.
They both stopped in sight down the lane, where the third man lay insensible.</p>
<p>“Take this!” said the slender lady, and she gave my brother her
revolver.</p>
<p>“Go back to the chaise,” said my brother, wiping the blood from his
split lip.</p>
<p>She turned without a word—they were both panting—and they went back
to where the lady in white struggled to hold back the frightened pony.</p>
<p>The robbers had evidently had enough of it. When my brother looked again they
were retreating.</p>
<p>“I’ll sit here,” said my brother, “if I may”; and
he got upon the empty front seat. The lady looked over her shoulder.</p>
<p>“Give me the reins,” she said, and laid the whip along the
pony’s side. In another moment a bend in the road hid the three men from
my brother’s eyes.</p>
<p>So, quite unexpectedly, my brother found himself, panting, with a cut mouth, a
bruised jaw, and bloodstained knuckles, driving along an unknown lane with
these two women.</p>
<p>He learned they were the wife and the younger sister of a surgeon living at
Stanmore, who had come in the small hours from a dangerous case at Pinner, and
heard at some railway station on his way of the Martian advance. He had hurried
home, roused the women—their servant had left them two days
before—packed some provisions, put his revolver under the
seat—luckily for my brother—and told them to drive on to Edgware,
with the idea of getting a train there. He stopped behind to tell the
neighbours. He would overtake them, he said, at about half past four in the
morning, and now it was nearly nine and they had seen nothing of him. They
could not stop in Edgware because of the growing traffic through the place, and
so they had come into this side lane.</p>
<p>That was the story they told my brother in fragments when presently they
stopped again, nearer to New Barnet. He promised to stay with them, at least
until they could determine what to do, or until the missing man arrived, and
professed to be an expert shot with the revolver—a weapon strange to
him—in order to give them confidence.</p>
<p>They made a sort of encampment by the wayside, and the pony became happy in the
hedge. He told them of his own escape out of London, and all that he knew of
these Martians and their ways. The sun crept higher in the sky, and after a
time their talk died out and gave place to an uneasy state of anticipation.
Several wayfarers came along the lane, and of these my brother gathered such
news as he could. Every broken answer he had deepened his impression of the
great disaster that had come on humanity, deepened his persuasion of the
immediate necessity for prosecuting this flight. He urged the matter upon them.</p>
<p>“We have money,” said the slender woman, and hesitated.</p>
<p>Her eyes met my brother’s, and her hesitation ended.</p>
<p>“So have I,” said my brother.</p>
<p>She explained that they had as much as thirty pounds in gold, besides a
five-pound note, and suggested that with that they might get upon a train at
St. Albans or New Barnet. My brother thought that was hopeless, seeing the fury
of the Londoners to crowd upon the trains, and broached his own idea of
striking across Essex towards Harwich and thence escaping from the country
altogether.</p>
<p>Mrs. Elphinstone—that was the name of the woman in white—would
listen to no reasoning, and kept calling upon “George”; but her
sister-in-law was astonishingly quiet and deliberate, and at last agreed to my
brother’s suggestion. So, designing to cross the Great North Road, they
went on towards Barnet, my brother leading the pony to save it as much as
possible. As the sun crept up the sky the day became excessively hot, and under
foot a thick, whitish sand grew burning and blinding, so that they travelled
only very slowly. The hedges were grey with dust. And as they advanced towards
Barnet a tumultuous murmuring grew stronger.</p>
<p>They began to meet more people. For the most part these were staring before
them, murmuring indistinct questions, jaded, haggard, unclean. One man in
evening dress passed them on foot, his eyes on the ground. They heard his
voice, and, looking back at him, saw one hand clutched in his hair and the
other beating invisible things. His paroxysm of rage over, he went on his way
without once looking back.</p>
<p>As my brother’s party went on towards the crossroads to the south of
Barnet they saw a woman approaching the road across some fields on their left,
carrying a child and with two other children; and then passed a man in dirty
black, with a thick stick in one hand and a small portmanteau in the other.
Then round the corner of the lane, from between the villas that guarded it at
its confluence with the high road, came a little cart drawn by a sweating black
pony and driven by a sallow youth in a bowler hat, grey with dust. There were
three girls, East End factory girls, and a couple of little children crowded in
the cart.</p>
<p>“This’ll tike us rahnd Edgware?” asked the driver, wild-eyed,
white-faced; and when my brother told him it would if he turned to the left, he
whipped up at once without the formality of thanks.</p>
<p>My brother noticed a pale grey smoke or haze rising among the houses in front
of them, and veiling the white façade of a terrace beyond the road that
appeared between the backs of the villas. Mrs. Elphinstone suddenly cried out
at a number of tongues of smoky red flame leaping up above the houses in front
of them against the hot, blue sky. The tumultuous noise resolved itself now
into the disorderly mingling of many voices, the gride of many wheels, the
creaking of waggons, and the staccato of hoofs. The lane came round sharply not
fifty yards from the crossroads.</p>
<p>“Good heavens!” cried Mrs. Elphinstone. “What is this you are
driving us into?”</p>
<p>My brother stopped.</p>
<p>For the main road was a boiling stream of people, a torrent of human beings
rushing northward, one pressing on another. A great bank of dust, white and
luminous in the blaze of the sun, made everything within twenty feet of the
ground grey and indistinct and was perpetually renewed by the hurrying feet of
a dense crowd of horses and of men and women on foot, and by the wheels of
vehicles of every description.</p>
<p>“Way!” my brother heard voices crying. “Make way!”</p>
<p>It was like riding into the smoke of a fire to approach the meeting point of
the lane and road; the crowd roared like a fire, and the dust was hot and
pungent. And, indeed, a little way up the road a villa was burning and sending
rolling masses of black smoke across the road to add to the confusion.</p>
<p>Two men came past them. Then a dirty woman, carrying a heavy bundle and
weeping. A lost retriever dog, with hanging tongue, circled dubiously round
them, scared and wretched, and fled at my brother’s threat.</p>
<p>So much as they could see of the road Londonward between the houses to the
right was a tumultuous stream of dirty, hurrying people, pent in between the
villas on either side; the black heads, the crowded forms, grew into
distinctness as they rushed towards the corner, hurried past, and merged their
individuality again in a receding multitude that was swallowed up at last in a
cloud of dust.</p>
<p>“Go on! Go on!” cried the voices. “Way! Way!”</p>
<p>One man’s hands pressed on the back of another. My brother stood at the
pony’s head. Irresistibly attracted, he advanced slowly, pace by pace,
down the lane.</p>
<p>Edgware had been a scene of confusion, Chalk Farm a riotous tumult, but this
was a whole population in movement. It is hard to imagine that host. It had no
character of its own. The figures poured out past the corner, and receded with
their backs to the group in the lane. Along the margin came those who were on
foot threatened by the wheels, stumbling in the ditches, blundering into one
another.</p>
<p>The carts and carriages crowded close upon one another, making little way for
those swifter and more impatient vehicles that darted forward every now and
then when an opportunity showed itself of doing so, sending the people
scattering against the fences and gates of the villas.</p>
<p>“Push on!” was the cry. “Push on! They are coming!”</p>
<p>In one cart stood a blind man in the uniform of the Salvation Army,
gesticulating with his crooked fingers and bawling, “Eternity!
Eternity!” His voice was hoarse and very loud so that my brother could
hear him long after he was lost to sight in the dust. Some of the people who
crowded in the carts whipped stupidly at their horses and quarrelled with other
drivers; some sat motionless, staring at nothing with miserable eyes; some
gnawed their hands with thirst, or lay prostrate in the bottoms of their
conveyances. The horses’ bits were covered with foam, their eyes
bloodshot.</p>
<p>There were cabs, carriages, shop-carts, waggons, beyond counting; a mail cart,
a road-cleaner’s cart marked “Vestry of St. Pancras,” a huge
timber waggon crowded with roughs. A brewer’s dray rumbled by with its
two near wheels splashed with fresh blood.</p>
<p>“Clear the way!” cried the voices. “Clear the way!”</p>
<p>“Eter-nity! Eter-nity!” came echoing down the road.</p>
<p>There were sad, haggard women tramping by, well dressed, with children that
cried and stumbled, their dainty clothes smothered in dust, their weary faces
smeared with tears. With many of these came men, sometimes helpful, sometimes
lowering and savage. Fighting side by side with them pushed some weary street
outcast in faded black rags, wide-eyed, loud-voiced, and foul-mouthed. There
were sturdy workmen thrusting their way along, wretched, unkempt men, clothed
like clerks or shopmen, struggling spasmodically; a wounded soldier my brother
noticed, men dressed in the clothes of railway porters, one wretched creature
in a nightshirt with a coat thrown over it.</p>
<p>But varied as its composition was, certain things all that host had in common.
There were fear and pain on their faces, and fear behind them. A tumult up the
road, a quarrel for a place in a waggon, sent the whole host of them quickening
their pace; even a man so scared and broken that his knees bent under him was
galvanised for a moment into renewed activity. The heat and dust had already
been at work upon this multitude. Their skins were dry, their lips black and
cracked. They were all thirsty, weary, and footsore. And amid the various cries
one heard disputes, reproaches, groans of weariness and fatigue; the voices of
most of them were hoarse and weak. Through it all ran a refrain:</p>
<p>“Way! Way! The Martians are coming!”</p>
<p>Few stopped and came aside from that flood. The lane opened slantingly into the
main road with a narrow opening, and had a delusive appearance of coming from
the direction of London. Yet a kind of eddy of people drove into its mouth;
weaklings elbowed out of the stream, who for the most part rested but a moment
before plunging into it again. A little way down the lane, with two friends
bending over him, lay a man with a bare leg, wrapped about with bloody rags. He
was a lucky man to have friends.</p>
<p>A little old man, with a grey military moustache and a filthy black frock coat,
limped out and sat down beside the trap, removed his boot—his sock was
blood-stained—shook out a pebble, and hobbled on again; and then a little
girl of eight or nine, all alone, threw herself under the hedge close by my
brother, weeping.</p>
<p>“I can’t go on! I can’t go on!”</p>
<p>My brother woke from his torpor of astonishment and lifted her up, speaking
gently to her, and carried her to Miss Elphinstone. So soon as my brother
touched her she became quite still, as if frightened.</p>
<p>“Ellen!” shrieked a woman in the crowd, with tears in her
voice—“Ellen!” And the child suddenly darted away from my
brother, crying “Mother!”</p>
<p>“They are coming,” said a man on horseback, riding past along the
lane.</p>
<p>“Out of the way, there!” bawled a coachman, towering high; and my
brother saw a closed carriage turning into the lane.</p>
<p>The people crushed back on one another to avoid the horse. My brother pushed
the pony and chaise back into the hedge, and the man drove by and stopped at
the turn of the way. It was a carriage, with a pole for a pair of horses, but
only one was in the traces. My brother saw dimly through the dust that two men
lifted out something on a white stretcher and put it gently on the grass
beneath the privet hedge.</p>
<p>One of the men came running to my brother.</p>
<p>“Where is there any water?” he said. “He is dying fast, and
very thirsty. It is Lord Garrick.”</p>
<p>“Lord Garrick!” said my brother; “the Chief Justice?”</p>
<p>“The water?” he said.</p>
<p>“There may be a tap,” said my brother, “in some of the
houses. We have no water. I dare not leave my people.”</p>
<p>The man pushed against the crowd towards the gate of the corner house.</p>
<p>“Go on!” said the people, thrusting at him. “They are coming!
Go on!”</p>
<p>Then my brother’s attention was distracted by a bearded, eagle-faced man
lugging a small handbag, which split even as my brother’s eyes rested on
it and disgorged a mass of sovereigns that seemed to break up into separate
coins as it struck the ground. They rolled hither and thither among the
struggling feet of men and horses. The man stopped and looked stupidly at the
heap, and the shaft of a cab struck his shoulder and sent him reeling. He gave
a shriek and dodged back, and a cartwheel shaved him narrowly.</p>
<p>“Way!” cried the men all about him. “Make way!”</p>
<p>So soon as the cab had passed, he flung himself, with both hands open, upon the
heap of coins, and began thrusting handfuls in his pocket. A horse rose close
upon him, and in another moment, half rising, he had been borne down under the
horse’s hoofs.</p>
<p>“Stop!” screamed my brother, and pushing a woman out of his way,
tried to clutch the bit of the horse.</p>
<p>Before he could get to it, he heard a scream under the wheels, and saw through
the dust the rim passing over the poor wretch’s back. The driver of the
cart slashed his whip at my brother, who ran round behind the cart. The
multitudinous shouting confused his ears. The man was writhing in the dust
among his scattered money, unable to rise, for the wheel had broken his back,
and his lower limbs lay limp and dead. My brother stood up and yelled at the
next driver, and a man on a black horse came to his assistance.</p>
<p>“Get him out of the road,” said he; and, clutching the man’s
collar with his free hand, my brother lugged him sideways. But he still
clutched after his money, and regarded my brother fiercely, hammering at his
arm with a handful of gold. “Go on! Go on!” shouted angry voices
behind. “Way! Way!”</p>
<p>There was a smash as the pole of a carriage crashed into the cart that the man
on horseback stopped. My brother looked up, and the man with the gold twisted
his head round and bit the wrist that held his collar. There was a concussion,
and the black horse came staggering sideways, and the carthorse pushed beside
it. A hoof missed my brother’s foot by a hair’s breadth. He
released his grip on the fallen man and jumped back. He saw anger change to
terror on the face of the poor wretch on the ground, and in a moment he was
hidden and my brother was borne backward and carried past the entrance of the
lane, and had to fight hard in the torrent to recover it.</p>
<p>He saw Miss Elphinstone covering her eyes, and a little child, with all a
child’s want of sympathetic imagination, staring with dilated eyes at a
dusty something that lay black and still, ground and crushed under the rolling
wheels. “Let us go back!” he shouted, and began turning the pony
round. “We cannot cross this—hell,” he said and they went
back a hundred yards the way they had come, until the fighting crowd was
hidden. As they passed the bend in the lane my brother saw the face of the
dying man in the ditch under the privet, deadly white and drawn, and shining
with perspiration. The two women sat silent, crouching in their seat and
shivering.</p>
<p>Then beyond the bend my brother stopped again. Miss Elphinstone was white and
pale, and her sister-in-law sat weeping, too wretched even to call upon
“George.” My brother was horrified and perplexed. So soon as they
had retreated he realised how urgent and unavoidable it was to attempt this
crossing. He turned to Miss Elphinstone, suddenly resolute.</p>
<p>“We must go that way,” he said, and led the pony round again.</p>
<p>For the second time that day this girl proved her quality. To force their way
into the torrent of people, my brother plunged into the traffic and held back a
cab horse, while she drove the pony across its head. A waggon locked wheels for
a moment and ripped a long splinter from the chaise. In another moment they
were caught and swept forward by the stream. My brother, with the
cabman’s whip marks red across his face and hands, scrambled into the
chaise and took the reins from her.</p>
<p>“Point the revolver at the man behind,” he said, giving it to her,
“if he presses us too hard. No!—point it at his horse.”</p>
<p>Then he began to look out for a chance of edging to the right across the road.
But once in the stream he seemed to lose volition, to become a part of that
dusty rout. They swept through Chipping Barnet with the torrent; they were
nearly a mile beyond the centre of the town before they had fought across to
the opposite side of the way. It was din and confusion indescribable; but in
and beyond the town the road forks repeatedly, and this to some extent relieved
the stress.</p>
<p>They struck eastward through Hadley, and there on either side of the road, and
at another place farther on they came upon a great multitude of people drinking
at the stream, some fighting to come at the water. And farther on, from a lull
near East Barnet, they saw two trains running slowly one after the other
without signal or order—trains swarming with people, with men even among
the coals behind the engines—going northward along the Great Northern
Railway. My brother supposes they must have filled outside London, for at that
time the furious terror of the people had rendered the central termini
impossible.</p>
<p>Near this place they halted for the rest of the afternoon, for the violence of
the day had already utterly exhausted all three of them. They began to suffer
the beginnings of hunger; the night was cold, and none of them dared to sleep.
And in the evening many people came hurrying along the road nearby their
stopping place, fleeing from unknown dangers before them, and going in the
direction from which my brother had come.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap17"></SPAN>XVII.<br/> THE “THUNDER CHILD”.</h2>
<p>Had the Martians aimed only at destruction, they might on Monday have
annihilated the entire population of London, as it spread itself slowly through
the home counties. Not only along the road through Barnet, but also through
Edgware and Waltham Abbey, and along the roads eastward to Southend and
Shoeburyness, and south of the Thames to Deal and Broadstairs, poured the same
frantic rout. If one could have hung that June morning in a balloon in the
blazing blue above London every northward and eastward road running out of the
tangled maze of streets would have seemed stippled black with the streaming
fugitives, each dot a human agony of terror and physical distress. I have set
forth at length in the last chapter my brother’s account of the road
through Chipping Barnet, in order that my readers may realise how that swarming
of black dots appeared to one of those concerned. Never before in the history
of the world had such a mass of human beings moved and suffered together. The
legendary hosts of Goths and Huns, the hugest armies Asia has ever seen, would
have been but a drop in that current. And this was no disciplined march; it was
a stampede—a stampede gigantic and terrible—without order and
without a goal, six million people unarmed and unprovisioned, driving headlong.
It was the beginning of the rout of civilisation, of the massacre of mankind.</p>
<p>Directly below him the balloonist would have seen the network of streets far
and wide, houses, churches, squares, crescents, gardens—already
derelict—spread out like a huge map, and in the southward <i>blotted</i>.
Over Ealing, Richmond, Wimbledon, it would have seemed as if some monstrous pen
had flung ink upon the chart. Steadily, incessantly, each black splash grew and
spread, shooting out ramifications this way and that, now banking itself
against rising ground, now pouring swiftly over a crest into a new-found
valley, exactly as a gout of ink would spread itself upon blotting paper.</p>
<p>And beyond, over the blue hills that rise southward of the river, the
glittering Martians went to and fro, calmly and methodically spreading their
poison cloud over this patch of country and then over that, laying it again
with their steam jets when it had served its purpose, and taking possession of
the conquered country. They do not seem to have aimed at extermination so much
as at complete demoralisation and the destruction of any opposition. They
exploded any stores of powder they came upon, cut every telegraph, and wrecked
the railways here and there. They were hamstringing mankind. They seemed in no
hurry to extend the field of their operations, and did not come beyond the
central part of London all that day. It is possible that a very considerable
number of people in London stuck to their houses through Monday morning.
Certain it is that many died at home suffocated by the Black Smoke.</p>
<p>Until about midday the Pool of London was an astonishing scene. Steamboats and
shipping of all sorts lay there, tempted by the enormous sums of money offered
by fugitives, and it is said that many who swam out to these vessels were
thrust off with boathooks and drowned. About one o’clock in the afternoon
the thinning remnant of a cloud of the black vapour appeared between the arches
of Blackfriars Bridge. At that the Pool became a scene of mad confusion,
fighting, and collision, and for some time a multitude of boats and barges
jammed in the northern arch of the Tower Bridge, and the sailors and lightermen
had to fight savagely against the people who swarmed upon them from the
riverfront. People were actually clambering down the piers of the bridge from
above.</p>
<p>When, an hour later, a Martian appeared beyond the Clock Tower and waded down
the river, nothing but wreckage floated above Limehouse.</p>
<p>Of the falling of the fifth cylinder I have presently to tell. The sixth star
fell at Wimbledon. My brother, keeping watch beside the women in the chaise in
a meadow, saw the green flash of it far beyond the hills. On Tuesday the little
party, still set upon getting across the sea, made its way through the swarming
country towards Colchester. The news that the Martians were now in possession
of the whole of London was confirmed. They had been seen at Highgate, and even,
it was said, at Neasden. But they did not come into my brother’s view
until the morrow.</p>
<p>That day the scattered multitudes began to realise the urgent need of
provisions. As they grew hungry the rights of property ceased to be regarded.
Farmers were out to defend their cattle-sheds, granaries, and ripening root
crops with arms in their hands. A number of people now, like my brother, had
their faces eastward, and there were some desperate souls even going back
towards London to get food. These were chiefly people from the northern
suburbs, whose knowledge of the Black Smoke came by hearsay. He heard that
about half the members of the government had gathered at Birmingham, and that
enormous quantities of high explosives were being prepared to be used in
automatic mines across the Midland counties.</p>
<p>He was also told that the Midland Railway Company had replaced the desertions
of the first day’s panic, had resumed traffic, and was running northward
trains from St. Albans to relieve the congestion of the home counties. There
was also a placard in Chipping Ongar announcing that large stores of flour were
available in the northern towns and that within twenty-four hours bread would
be distributed among the starving people in the neighbourhood. But this
intelligence did not deter him from the plan of escape he had formed, and the
three pressed eastward all day, and heard no more of the bread distribution
than this promise. Nor, as a matter of fact, did anyone else hear more of it.
That night fell the seventh star, falling upon Primrose Hill. It fell while
Miss Elphinstone was watching, for she took that duty alternately with my
brother. She saw it.</p>
<p>On Wednesday the three fugitives—they had passed the night in a field of
unripe wheat—reached Chelmsford, and there a body of the inhabitants,
calling itself the Committee of Public Supply, seized the pony as provisions,
and would give nothing in exchange for it but the promise of a share in it the
next day. Here there were rumours of Martians at Epping, and news of the
destruction of Waltham Abbey Powder Mills in a vain attempt to blow up one of
the invaders.</p>
<p>People were watching for Martians here from the church towers. My brother, very
luckily for him as it chanced, preferred to push on at once to the coast rather
than wait for food, although all three of them were very hungry. By midday they
passed through Tillingham, which, strangely enough, seemed to be quite silent
and deserted, save for a few furtive plunderers hunting for food. Near
Tillingham they suddenly came in sight of the sea, and the most amazing crowd
of shipping of all sorts that it is possible to imagine.</p>
<p>For after the sailors could no longer come up the Thames, they came on to the
Essex coast, to Harwich and Walton and Clacton, and afterwards to Foulness and
Shoebury, to bring off the people. They lay in a huge sickle-shaped curve that
vanished into mist at last towards the Naze. Close inshore was a multitude of
fishing smacks—English, Scotch, French, Dutch, and Swedish; steam
launches from the Thames, yachts, electric boats; and beyond were ships of
larger burden, a multitude of filthy colliers, trim merchantmen, cattle ships,
passenger boats, petroleum tanks, ocean tramps, an old white transport even,
neat white and grey liners from Southampton and Hamburg; and along the blue
coast across the Blackwater my brother could make out dimly a dense swarm of
boats chaffering with the people on the beach, a swarm which also extended up
the Blackwater almost to Maldon.</p>
<p>About a couple of miles out lay an ironclad, very low in the water, almost, to
my brother’s perception, like a water-logged ship. This was the ram
<i>Thunder Child</i>. It was the only warship in sight, but far away to the
right over the smooth surface of the sea—for that day there was a dead
calm—lay a serpent of black smoke to mark the next ironclads of the
Channel Fleet, which hovered in an extended line, steam up and ready for
action, across the Thames estuary during the course of the Martian conquest,
vigilant and yet powerless to prevent it.</p>
<p>At the sight of the sea, Mrs. Elphinstone, in spite of the assurances of her
sister-in-law, gave way to panic. She had never been out of England before, she
would rather die than trust herself friendless in a foreign country, and so
forth. She seemed, poor woman, to imagine that the French and the Martians
might prove very similar. She had been growing increasingly hysterical,
fearful, and depressed during the two days’ journeyings. Her great idea
was to return to Stanmore. Things had been always well and safe at Stanmore.
They would find George at Stanmore....</p>
<p>It was with the greatest difficulty they could get her down to the beach, where
presently my brother succeeded in attracting the attention of some men on a
paddle steamer from the Thames. They sent a boat and drove a bargain for
thirty-six pounds for the three. The steamer was going, these men said, to
Ostend.</p>
<p>It was about two o’clock when my brother, having paid their fares at the
gangway, found himself safely aboard the steamboat with his charges. There was
food aboard, albeit at exorbitant prices, and the three of them contrived to
eat a meal on one of the seats forward.</p>
<p>There were already a couple of score of passengers aboard, some of whom had
expended their last money in securing a passage, but the captain lay off the
Blackwater until five in the afternoon, picking up passengers until the seated
decks were even dangerously crowded. He would probably have remained longer had
it not been for the sound of guns that began about that hour in the south. As
if in answer, the ironclad seaward fired a small gun and hoisted a string of
flags. A jet of smoke sprang out of her funnels.</p>
<p>Some of the passengers were of opinion that this firing came from Shoeburyness,
until it was noticed that it was growing louder. At the same time, far away in
the southeast the masts and upperworks of three ironclads rose one after the
other out of the sea, beneath clouds of black smoke. But my brother’s
attention speedily reverted to the distant firing in the south. He fancied he
saw a column of smoke rising out of the distant grey haze.</p>
<p>The little steamer was already flapping her way eastward of the big crescent of
shipping, and the low Essex coast was growing blue and hazy, when a Martian
appeared, small and faint in the remote distance, advancing along the muddy
coast from the direction of Foulness. At that the captain on the bridge swore
at the top of his voice with fear and anger at his own delay, and the paddles
seemed infected with his terror. Every soul aboard stood at the bulwarks or on
the seats of the steamer and stared at that distant shape, higher than the
trees or church towers inland, and advancing with a leisurely parody of a human
stride.</p>
<p>It was the first Martian my brother had seen, and he stood, more amazed than
terrified, watching this Titan advancing deliberately towards the shipping,
wading farther and farther into the water as the coast fell away. Then, far
away beyond the Crouch, came another, striding over some stunted trees, and
then yet another, still farther off, wading deeply through a shiny mudflat that
seemed to hang halfway up between sea and sky. They were all stalking seaward,
as if to intercept the escape of the multitudinous vessels that were crowded
between Foulness and the Naze. In spite of the throbbing exertions of the
engines of the little paddle-boat, and the pouring foam that her wheels flung
behind her, she receded with terrifying slowness from this ominous advance.</p>
<p>Glancing northwestward, my brother saw the large crescent of shipping already
writhing with the approaching terror; one ship passing behind another, another
coming round from broadside to end on, steamships whistling and giving off
volumes of steam, sails being let out, launches rushing hither and thither. He
was so fascinated by this and by the creeping danger away to the left that he
had no eyes for anything seaward. And then a swift movement of the steamboat
(she had suddenly come round to avoid being run down) flung him headlong from
the seat upon which he was standing. There was a shouting all about him, a
trampling of feet, and a cheer that seemed to be answered faintly. The
steamboat lurched and rolled him over upon his hands.</p>
<p>He sprang to his feet and saw to starboard, and not a hundred yards from their
heeling, pitching boat, a vast iron bulk like the blade of a plough tearing
through the water, tossing it on either side in huge waves of foam that leaped
towards the steamer, flinging her paddles helplessly in the air, and then
sucking her deck down almost to the waterline.</p>
<p>A douche of spray blinded my brother for a moment. When his eyes were clear
again he saw the monster had passed and was rushing landward. Big iron
upperworks rose out of this headlong structure, and from that twin funnels
projected and spat a smoking blast shot with fire. It was the torpedo ram,
<i>Thunder Child</i>, steaming headlong, coming to the rescue of the threatened
shipping.</p>
<p>Keeping his footing on the heaving deck by clutching the bulwarks, my brother
looked past this charging leviathan at the Martians again, and he saw the three
of them now close together, and standing so far out to sea that their tripod
supports were almost entirely submerged. Thus sunken, and seen in remote
perspective, they appeared far less formidable than the huge iron bulk in whose
wake the steamer was pitching so helplessly. It would seem they were regarding
this new antagonist with astonishment. To their intelligence, it may be, the
giant was even such another as themselves. The <i>Thunder Child</i> fired no
gun, but simply drove full speed towards them. It was probably her not firing
that enabled her to get so near the enemy as she did. They did not know what to
make of her. One shell, and they would have sent her to the bottom forthwith
with the Heat-Ray.</p>
<p>She was steaming at such a pace that in a minute she seemed halfway between the
steamboat and the Martians—a diminishing black bulk against the receding
horizontal expanse of the Essex coast.</p>
<p>Suddenly the foremost Martian lowered his tube and discharged a canister of the
black gas at the ironclad. It hit her larboard side and glanced off in an inky
jet that rolled away to seaward, an unfolding torrent of Black Smoke, from
which the ironclad drove clear. To the watchers from the steamer, low in the
water and with the sun in their eyes, it seemed as though she were already
among the Martians.</p>
<p>They saw the gaunt figures separating and rising out of the water as they
retreated shoreward, and one of them raised the camera-like generator of the
Heat-Ray. He held it pointing obliquely downward, and a bank of steam sprang
from the water at its touch. It must have driven through the iron of the
ship’s side like a white-hot iron rod through paper.</p>
<p>A flicker of flame went up through the rising steam, and then the Martian
reeled and staggered. In another moment he was cut down, and a great body of
water and steam shot high in the air. The guns of the <i>Thunder Child</i>
sounded through the reek, going off one after the other, and one shot splashed
the water high close by the steamer, ricocheted towards the other flying ships
to the north, and smashed a smack to matchwood.</p>
<p>But no one heeded that very much. At the sight of the Martian’s collapse
the captain on the bridge yelled inarticulately, and all the crowding
passengers on the steamer’s stern shouted together. And then they yelled
again. For, surging out beyond the white tumult, drove something long and
black, the flames streaming from its middle parts, its ventilators and funnels
spouting fire.</p>
<p>She was alive still; the steering gear, it seems, was intact and her engines
working. She headed straight for a second Martian, and was within a hundred
yards of him when the Heat-Ray came to bear. Then with a violent thud, a
blinding flash, her decks, her funnels, leaped upward. The Martian staggered
with the violence of her explosion, and in another moment the flaming wreckage,
still driving forward with the impetus of its pace, had struck him and crumpled
him up like a thing of cardboard. My brother shouted involuntarily. A boiling
tumult of steam hid everything again.</p>
<p>“Two!” yelled the captain.</p>
<p>Everyone was shouting. The whole steamer from end to end rang with frantic
cheering that was taken up first by one and then by all in the crowding
multitude of ships and boats that was driving out to sea.</p>
<p>The steam hung upon the water for many minutes, hiding the third Martian and
the coast altogether. And all this time the boat was paddling steadily out to
sea and away from the fight; and when at last the confusion cleared, the
drifting bank of black vapour intervened, and nothing of the <i>Thunder
Child</i> could be made out, nor could the third Martian be seen. But the
ironclads to seaward were now quite close and standing in towards shore past
the steamboat.</p>
<p>The little vessel continued to beat its way seaward, and the ironclads receded
slowly towards the coast, which was hidden still by a marbled bank of vapour,
part steam, part black gas, eddying and combining in the strangest way. The
fleet of refugees was scattering to the northeast; several smacks were sailing
between the ironclads and the steamboat. After a time, and before they reached
the sinking cloud bank, the warships turned northward, and then abruptly went
about and passed into the thickening haze of evening southward. The coast grew
faint, and at last indistinguishable amid the low banks of clouds that were
gathering about the sinking sun.</p>
<p>Then suddenly out of the golden haze of the sunset came the vibration of guns,
and a form of black shadows moving. Everyone struggled to the rail of the
steamer and peered into the blinding furnace of the west, but nothing was to be
distinguished clearly. A mass of smoke rose slanting and barred the face of the
sun. The steamboat throbbed on its way through an interminable suspense.</p>
<p>The sun sank into grey clouds, the sky flushed and darkened, the evening star
trembled into sight. It was deep twilight when the captain cried out and
pointed. My brother strained his eyes. Something rushed up into the sky out of
the greyness—rushed slantingly upward and very swiftly into the luminous
clearness above the clouds in the western sky; something flat and broad, and
very large, that swept round in a vast curve, grew smaller, sank slowly, and
vanished again into the grey mystery of the night. And as it flew it rained
down darkness upon the land.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="book02"></SPAN>BOOK TWO<br/> THE EARTH UNDER THE MARTIANS.</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="chap18"></SPAN>I.<br/> UNDER FOOT.</h2>
<p>In the first book I have wandered so much from my own adventures to tell of the
experiences of my brother that all through the last two chapters I and the
curate have been lurking in the empty house at Halliford whither we fled to
escape the Black Smoke. There I will resume. We stopped there all Sunday night
and all the next day—the day of the panic—in a little island of
daylight, cut off by the Black Smoke from the rest of the world. We could do
nothing but wait in aching inactivity during those two weary days.</p>
<p>My mind was occupied by anxiety for my wife. I figured her at Leatherhead,
terrified, in danger, mourning me already as a dead man. I paced the rooms and
cried aloud when I thought of how I was cut off from her, of all that might
happen to her in my absence. My cousin I knew was brave enough for any
emergency, but he was not the sort of man to realise danger quickly, to rise
promptly. What was needed now was not bravery, but circumspection. My only
consolation was to believe that the Martians were moving Londonward and away
from her. Such vague anxieties keep the mind sensitive and painful. I grew very
weary and irritable with the curate’s perpetual ejaculations; I tired of
the sight of his selfish despair. After some ineffectual remonstrance I kept
away from him, staying in a room—evidently a children’s
schoolroom—containing globes, forms, and copybooks. When he followed me
thither, I went to a box room at the top of the house and, in order to be alone
with my aching miseries, locked myself in.</p>
<p>We were hopelessly hemmed in by the Black Smoke all that day and the morning of
the next. There were signs of people in the next house on Sunday
evening—a face at a window and moving lights, and later the slamming of a
door. But I do not know who these people were, nor what became of them. We saw
nothing of them next day. The Black Smoke drifted slowly riverward all through
Monday morning, creeping nearer and nearer to us, driving at last along the
roadway outside the house that hid us.</p>
<p>A Martian came across the fields about midday, laying the stuff with a jet of
superheated steam that hissed against the walls, smashed all the windows it
touched, and scalded the curate’s hand as he fled out of the front room.
When at last we crept across the sodden rooms and looked out again, the country
northward was as though a black snowstorm had passed over it. Looking towards
the river, we were astonished to see an unaccountable redness mingling with the
black of the scorched meadows.</p>
<p>For a time we did not see how this change affected our position, save that we
were relieved of our fear of the Black Smoke. But later I perceived that we
were no longer hemmed in, that now we might get away. So soon as I realised
that the way of escape was open, my dream of action returned. But the curate
was lethargic, unreasonable.</p>
<p>“We are safe here,” he repeated; “safe here.”</p>
<p>I resolved to leave him—would that I had! Wiser now for the
artilleryman’s teaching, I sought out food and drink. I had found oil and
rags for my burns, and I also took a hat and a flannel shirt that I found in
one of the bedrooms. When it was clear to him that I meant to go
alone—had reconciled myself to going alone—he suddenly roused
himself to come. And all being quiet throughout the afternoon, we started about
five o’clock, as I should judge, along the blackened road to Sunbury.</p>
<p>In Sunbury, and at intervals along the road, were dead bodies lying in
contorted attitudes, horses as well as men, overturned carts and luggage, all
covered thickly with black dust. That pall of cindery powder made me think of
what I had read of the destruction of Pompeii. We got to Hampton Court without
misadventure, our minds full of strange and unfamiliar appearances, and at
Hampton Court our eyes were relieved to find a patch of green that had escaped
the suffocating drift. We went through Bushey Park, with its deer going to and
fro under the chestnuts, and some men and women hurrying in the distance
towards Hampton, and so we came to Twickenham. These were the first people we
saw.</p>
<p>Away across the road the woods beyond Ham and Petersham were still afire.
Twickenham was uninjured by either Heat-Ray or Black Smoke, and there were more
people about here, though none could give us news. For the most part they were
like ourselves, taking advantage of a lull to shift their quarters. I have an
impression that many of the houses here were still occupied by scared
inhabitants, too frightened even for flight. Here too the evidence of a hasty
rout was abundant along the road. I remember most vividly three smashed
bicycles in a heap, pounded into the road by the wheels of subsequent carts. We
crossed Richmond Bridge about half past eight. We hurried across the exposed
bridge, of course, but I noticed floating down the stream a number of red
masses, some many feet across. I did not know what these were—there was
no time for scrutiny—and I put a more horrible interpretation on them
than they deserved. Here again on the Surrey side were black dust that had once
been smoke, and dead bodies—a heap near the approach to the station; but
we had no glimpse of the Martians until we were some way towards Barnes.</p>
<p>We saw in the blackened distance a group of three people running down a side
street towards the river, but otherwise it seemed deserted. Up the hill
Richmond town was burning briskly; outside the town of Richmond there was no
trace of the Black Smoke.</p>
<p>Then suddenly, as we approached Kew, came a number of people running, and the
upperworks of a Martian fighting-machine loomed in sight over the housetops,
not a hundred yards away from us. We stood aghast at our danger, and had the
Martian looked down we must immediately have perished. We were so terrified
that we dared not go on, but turned aside and hid in a shed in a garden. There
the curate crouched, weeping silently, and refusing to stir again.</p>
<p>But my fixed idea of reaching Leatherhead would not let me rest, and in the
twilight I ventured out again. I went through a shrubbery, and along a passage
beside a big house standing in its own grounds, and so emerged upon the road
towards Kew. The curate I left in the shed, but he came hurrying after me.</p>
<p>That second start was the most foolhardy thing I ever did. For it was manifest
the Martians were about us. No sooner had the curate overtaken me than we saw
either the fighting-machine we had seen before or another, far away across the
meadows in the direction of Kew Lodge. Four or five little black figures
hurried before it across the green-grey of the field, and in a moment it was
evident this Martian pursued them. In three strides he was among them, and they
ran radiating from his feet in all directions. He used no Heat-Ray to destroy
them, but picked them up one by one. Apparently he tossed them into the great
metallic carrier which projected behind him, much as a workman’s basket
hangs over his shoulder.</p>
<p>It was the first time I realised that the Martians might have any other purpose
than destruction with defeated humanity. We stood for a moment petrified, then
turned and fled through a gate behind us into a walled garden, fell into,
rather than found, a fortunate ditch, and lay there, scarce daring to whisper
to each other until the stars were out.</p>
<p>I suppose it was nearly eleven o’clock before we gathered courage to
start again, no longer venturing into the road, but sneaking along hedgerows
and through plantations, and watching keenly through the darkness, he on the
right and I on the left, for the Martians, who seemed to be all about us. In
one place we blundered upon a scorched and blackened area, now cooling and
ashen, and a number of scattered dead bodies of men, burned horribly about the
heads and trunks but with their legs and boots mostly intact; and of dead
horses, fifty feet, perhaps, behind a line of four ripped guns and smashed gun
carriages.</p>
<p>Sheen, it seemed, had escaped destruction, but the place was silent and
deserted. Here we happened on no dead, though the night was too dark for us to
see into the side roads of the place. In Sheen my companion suddenly complained
of faintness and thirst, and we decided to try one of the houses.</p>
<p>The first house we entered, after a little difficulty with the window, was a
small semi-detached villa, and I found nothing eatable left in the place but
some mouldy cheese. There was, however, water to drink; and I took a hatchet,
which promised to be useful in our next house-breaking.</p>
<p>We then crossed to a place where the road turns towards Mortlake. Here there
stood a white house within a walled garden, and in the pantry of this domicile
we found a store of food—two loaves of bread in a pan, an uncooked steak,
and the half of a ham. I give this catalogue so precisely because, as it
happened, we were destined to subsist upon this store for the next fortnight.
Bottled beer stood under a shelf, and there were two bags of haricot beans and
some limp lettuces. This pantry opened into a kind of wash-up kitchen, and in
this was firewood; there was also a cupboard, in which we found nearly a dozen
of burgundy, tinned soups and salmon, and two tins of biscuits.</p>
<p>We sat in the adjacent kitchen in the dark—for we dared not strike a
light—and ate bread and ham, and drank beer out of the same bottle. The
curate, who was still timorous and restless, was now, oddly enough, for pushing
on, and I was urging him to keep up his strength by eating when the thing
happened that was to imprison us.</p>
<p>“It can’t be midnight yet,” I said, and then came a blinding
glare of vivid green light. Everything in the kitchen leaped out, clearly
visible in green and black, and vanished again. And then followed such a
concussion as I have never heard before or since. So close on the heels of this
as to seem instantaneous came a thud behind me, a clash of glass, a crash and
rattle of falling masonry all about us, and the plaster of the ceiling came
down upon us, smashing into a multitude of fragments upon our heads. I was
knocked headlong across the floor against the oven handle and stunned. I was
insensible for a long time, the curate told me, and when I came to we were in
darkness again, and he, with a face wet, as I found afterwards, with blood from
a cut forehead, was dabbing water over me.</p>
<p>For some time I could not recollect what had happened. Then things came to me
slowly. A bruise on my temple asserted itself.</p>
<p>“Are you better?” asked the curate in a whisper.</p>
<p>At last I answered him. I sat up.</p>
<p>“Don’t move,” he said. “The floor is covered with
smashed crockery from the dresser. You can’t possibly move without making
a noise, and I fancy <i>they</i> are outside.”</p>
<p>We both sat quite silent, so that we could scarcely hear each other breathing.
Everything seemed deadly still, but once something near us, some plaster or
broken brickwork, slid down with a rumbling sound. Outside and very near was an
intermittent, metallic rattle.</p>
<p>“That!” said the curate, when presently it happened again.</p>
<p>“Yes,” I said. “But what is it?”</p>
<p>“A Martian!” said the curate.</p>
<p>I listened again.</p>
<p>“It was not like the Heat-Ray,” I said, and for a time I was
inclined to think one of the great fighting-machines had stumbled against the
house, as I had seen one stumble against the tower of Shepperton Church.</p>
<p>Our situation was so strange and incomprehensible that for three or four hours,
until the dawn came, we scarcely moved. And then the light filtered in, not
through the window, which remained black, but through a triangular aperture
between a beam and a heap of broken bricks in the wall behind us. The interior
of the kitchen we now saw greyly for the first time.</p>
<p>The window had been burst in by a mass of garden mould, which flowed over the
table upon which we had been sitting and lay about our feet. Outside, the soil
was banked high against the house. At the top of the window frame we could see
an uprooted drainpipe. The floor was littered with smashed hardware; the end of
the kitchen towards the house was broken into, and since the daylight shone in
there, it was evident the greater part of the house had collapsed. Contrasting
vividly with this ruin was the neat dresser, stained in the fashion, pale
green, and with a number of copper and tin vessels below it, the wallpaper
imitating blue and white tiles, and a couple of coloured supplements fluttering
from the walls above the kitchen range.</p>
<p>As the dawn grew clearer, we saw through the gap in the wall the body of a
Martian, standing sentinel, I suppose, over the still glowing cylinder. At the
sight of that we crawled as circumspectly as possible out of the twilight of
the kitchen into the darkness of the scullery.</p>
<p>Abruptly the right interpretation dawned upon my mind.</p>
<p>“The fifth cylinder,” I whispered, “the fifth shot from Mars,
has struck this house and buried us under the ruins!”</p>
<p>For a time the curate was silent, and then he whispered:</p>
<p>“God have mercy upon us!”</p>
<p>I heard him presently whimpering to himself.</p>
<p>Save for that sound we lay quite still in the scullery; I for my part scarce
dared breathe, and sat with my eyes fixed on the faint light of the kitchen
door. I could just see the curate’s face, a dim, oval shape, and his
collar and cuffs. Outside there began a metallic hammering, then a violent
hooting, and then again, after a quiet interval, a hissing like the hissing of
an engine. These noises, for the most part problematical, continued
intermittently, and seemed if anything to increase in number as time wore on.
Presently a measured thudding and a vibration that made everything about us
quiver and the vessels in the pantry ring and shift, began and continued. Once
the light was eclipsed, and the ghostly kitchen doorway became absolutely dark.
For many hours we must have crouched there, silent and shivering, until our
tired attention failed. . . .</p>
<p>At last I found myself awake and very hungry. I am inclined to believe we must
have spent the greater portion of a day before that awakening. My hunger was at
a stride so insistent that it moved me to action. I told the curate I was going
to seek food, and felt my way towards the pantry. He made me no answer, but so
soon as I began eating the faint noise I made stirred him up and I heard him
crawling after me.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap19"></SPAN>II.<br/> WHAT WE SAW FROM THE RUINED HOUSE.</h2>
<p>After eating we crept back to the scullery, and there I must have dozed again,
for when presently I looked round I was alone. The thudding vibration continued
with wearisome persistence. I whispered for the curate several times, and at
last felt my way to the door of the kitchen. It was still daylight, and I
perceived him across the room, lying against the triangular hole that looked
out upon the Martians. His shoulders were hunched, so that his head was hidden
from me.</p>
<p>I could hear a number of noises almost like those in an engine shed; and the
place rocked with that beating thud. Through the aperture in the wall I could
see the top of a tree touched with gold and the warm blue of a tranquil evening
sky. For a minute or so I remained watching the curate, and then I advanced,
crouching and stepping with extreme care amid the broken crockery that littered
the floor.</p>
<p>I touched the curate’s leg, and he started so violently that a mass of
plaster went sliding down outside and fell with a loud impact. I gripped his
arm, fearing he might cry out, and for a long time we crouched motionless. Then
I turned to see how much of our rampart remained. The detachment of the plaster
had left a vertical slit open in the debris, and by raising myself cautiously
across a beam I was able to see out of this gap into what had been overnight a
quiet suburban roadway. Vast, indeed, was the change that we beheld.</p>
<p>The fifth cylinder must have fallen right into the midst of the house we had
first visited. The building had vanished, completely smashed, pulverised, and
dispersed by the blow. The cylinder lay now far beneath the original
foundations—deep in a hole, already vastly larger than the pit I had
looked into at Woking. The earth all round it had splashed under that
tremendous impact—“splashed” is the only word—and lay
in heaped piles that hid the masses of the adjacent houses. It had behaved
exactly like mud under the violent blow of a hammer. Our house had collapsed
backward; the front portion, even on the ground floor, had been destroyed
completely; by a chance the kitchen and scullery had escaped, and stood buried
now under soil and ruins, closed in by tons of earth on every side save towards
the cylinder. Over that aspect we hung now on the very edge of the great
circular pit the Martians were engaged in making. The heavy beating sound was
evidently just behind us, and ever and again a bright green vapour drove up
like a veil across our peephole.</p>
<p>The cylinder was already opened in the centre of the pit, and on the farther
edge of the pit, amid the smashed and gravel-heaped shrubbery, one of the great
fighting-machines, deserted by its occupant, stood stiff and tall against the
evening sky. At first I scarcely noticed the pit and the cylinder, although it
has been convenient to describe them first, on account of the extraordinary
glittering mechanism I saw busy in the excavation, and on account of the
strange creatures that were crawling slowly and painfully across the heaped
mould near it.</p>
<p>The mechanism it certainly was that held my attention first. It was one of
those complicated fabrics that have since been called handling-machines, and
the study of which has already given such an enormous impetus to terrestrial
invention. As it dawned upon me first, it presented a sort of metallic spider
with five jointed, agile legs, and with an extraordinary number of jointed
levers, bars, and reaching and clutching tentacles about its body. Most of its
arms were retracted, but with three long tentacles it was fishing out a number
of rods, plates, and bars which lined the covering and apparently strengthened
the walls of the cylinder. These, as it extracted them, were lifted out and
deposited upon a level surface of earth behind it.</p>
<p>Its motion was so swift, complex, and perfect that at first I did not see it as
a machine, in spite of its metallic glitter. The fighting-machines were
coordinated and animated to an extraordinary pitch, but nothing to compare with
this. People who have never seen these structures, and have only the
ill-imagined efforts of artists or the imperfect descriptions of such
eye-witnesses as myself to go upon, scarcely realise that living quality.</p>
<p>I recall particularly the illustration of one of the first pamphlets to give a
consecutive account of the war. The artist had evidently made a hasty study of
one of the fighting-machines, and there his knowledge ended. He presented them
as tilted, stiff tripods, without either flexibility or subtlety, and with an
altogether misleading monotony of effect. The pamphlet containing these
renderings had a considerable vogue, and I mention them here simply to warn the
reader against the impression they may have created. They were no more like the
Martians I saw in action than a Dutch doll is like a human being. To my mind,
the pamphlet would have been much better without them.</p>
<p>At first, I say, the handling-machine did not impress me as a machine, but as a
crablike creature with a glittering integument, the controlling Martian whose
delicate tentacles actuated its movements seeming to be simply the equivalent
of the crab’s cerebral portion. But then I perceived the resemblance of
its grey-brown, shiny, leathery integument to that of the other sprawling
bodies beyond, and the true nature of this dexterous workman dawned upon me.
With that realisation my interest shifted to those other creatures, the real
Martians. Already I had had a transient impression of these, and the first
nausea no longer obscured my observation. Moreover, I was concealed and
motionless, and under no urgency of action.</p>
<p>They were, I now saw, the most unearthly creatures it is possible to conceive.
They were huge round bodies—or, rather, heads—about four feet in
diameter, each body having in front of it a face. This face had no
nostrils—indeed, the Martians do not seem to have had any sense of smell,
but it had a pair of very large dark-coloured eyes, and just beneath this a
kind of fleshy beak. In the back of this head or body—I scarcely know how
to speak of it—was the single tight tympanic surface, since known to be
anatomically an ear, though it must have been almost useless in our dense air.
In a group round the mouth were sixteen slender, almost whiplike tentacles,
arranged in two bunches of eight each. These bunches have since been named
rather aptly, by that distinguished anatomist, Professor Howes, the
<i>hands</i>. Even as I saw these Martians for the first time they seemed to be
endeavouring to raise themselves on these hands, but of course, with the
increased weight of terrestrial conditions, this was impossible. There is
reason to suppose that on Mars they may have progressed upon them with some
facility.</p>
<p>The internal anatomy, I may remark here, as dissection has since shown, was
almost equally simple. The greater part of the structure was the brain, sending
enormous nerves to the eyes, ear, and tactile tentacles. Besides this were the
bulky lungs, into which the mouth opened, and the heart and its vessels. The
pulmonary distress caused by the denser atmosphere and greater gravitational
attraction was only too evident in the convulsive movements of the outer skin.</p>
<p>And this was the sum of the Martian organs. Strange as it may seem to a human
being, all the complex apparatus of digestion, which makes up the bulk of our
bodies, did not exist in the Martians. They were heads—merely heads.
Entrails they had none. They did not eat, much less digest. Instead, they took
the fresh, living blood of other creatures, and <i>injected</i> it into their
own veins. I have myself seen this being done, as I shall mention in its place.
But, squeamish as I may seem, I cannot bring myself to describe what I could
not endure even to continue watching. Let it suffice to say, blood obtained
from a still living animal, in most cases from a human being, was run directly
by means of a little pipette into the recipient canal. . . .</p>
<p>The bare idea of this is no doubt horribly repulsive to us, but at the same
time I think that we should remember how repulsive our carnivorous habits would
seem to an intelligent rabbit.</p>
<p>The physiological advantages of the practice of injection are undeniable, if
one thinks of the tremendous waste of human time and energy occasioned by
eating and the digestive process. Our bodies are half made up of glands and
tubes and organs, occupied in turning heterogeneous food into blood. The
digestive processes and their reaction upon the nervous system sap our strength
and colour our minds. Men go happy or miserable as they have healthy or
unhealthy livers, or sound gastric glands. But the Martians were lifted above
all these organic fluctuations of mood and emotion.</p>
<p>Their undeniable preference for men as their source of nourishment is partly
explained by the nature of the remains of the victims they had brought with
them as provisions from Mars. These creatures, to judge from the shrivelled
remains that have fallen into human hands, were bipeds with flimsy, silicious
skeletons (almost like those of the silicious sponges) and feeble musculature,
standing about six feet high and having round, erect heads, and large eyes in
flinty sockets. Two or three of these seem to have been brought in each
cylinder, and all were killed before earth was reached. It was just as well for
them, for the mere attempt to stand upright upon our planet would have broken
every bone in their bodies.</p>
<p>And while I am engaged in this description, I may add in this place certain
further details which, although they were not all evident to us at the time,
will enable the reader who is unacquainted with them to form a clearer picture
of these offensive creatures.</p>
<p>In three other points their physiology differed strangely from ours. Their
organisms did not sleep, any more than the heart of man sleeps. Since they had
no extensive muscular mechanism to recuperate, that periodical extinction was
unknown to them. They had little or no sense of fatigue, it would seem. On
earth they could never have moved without effort, yet even to the last they
kept in action. In twenty-four hours they did twenty-four hours of work, as
even on earth is perhaps the case with the ants.</p>
<p>In the next place, wonderful as it seems in a sexual world, the Martians were
absolutely without sex, and therefore without any of the tumultuous emotions
that arise from that difference among men. A young Martian, there can now be no
dispute, was really born upon earth during the war, and it was found attached
to its parent, partially <i>budded</i> off, just as young lilybulbs bud off, or
like the young animals in the fresh-water polyp.</p>
<p>In man, in all the higher terrestrial animals, such a method of increase has
disappeared; but even on this earth it was certainly the primitive method.
Among the lower animals, up even to those first cousins of the vertebrated
animals, the Tunicates, the two processes occur side by side, but finally the
sexual method superseded its competitor altogether. On Mars, however, just the
reverse has apparently been the case.</p>
<p>It is worthy of remark that a certain speculative writer of quasi-scientific
repute, writing long before the Martian invasion, did forecast for man a final
structure not unlike the actual Martian condition. His prophecy, I remember,
appeared in November or December, 1893, in a long-defunct publication, the
<i>Pall Mall Budget</i>, and I recall a caricature of it in a pre-Martian
periodical called <i>Punch</i>. He pointed out—writing in a foolish,
facetious tone—that the perfection of mechanical appliances must
ultimately supersede limbs; the perfection of chemical devices, digestion; that
such organs as hair, external nose, teeth, ears, and chin were no longer
essential parts of the human being, and that the tendency of natural selection
would lie in the direction of their steady diminution through the coming ages.
The brain alone remained a cardinal necessity. Only one other part of the body
had a strong case for survival, and that was the hand, “teacher and agent
of the brain.” While the rest of the body dwindled, the hands would grow
larger.</p>
<p>There is many a true word written in jest, and here in the Martians we have
beyond dispute the actual accomplishment of such a suppression of the animal
side of the organism by the intelligence. To me it is quite credible that the
Martians may be descended from beings not unlike ourselves, by a gradual
development of brain and hands (the latter giving rise to the two bunches of
delicate tentacles at last) at the expense of the rest of the body. Without the
body the brain would, of course, become a mere selfish intelligence, without
any of the emotional substratum of the human being.</p>
<p>The last salient point in which the systems of these creatures differed from
ours was in what one might have thought a very trivial particular.
Micro-organisms, which cause so much disease and pain on earth, have either
never appeared upon Mars or Martian sanitary science eliminated them ages ago.
A hundred diseases, all the fevers and contagions of human life, consumption,
cancers, tumours and such morbidities, never enter the scheme of their life.
And speaking of the differences between the life on Mars and terrestrial life,
I may allude here to the curious suggestions of the red weed.</p>
<p>Apparently the vegetable kingdom in Mars, instead of having green for a
dominant colour, is of a vivid blood-red tint. At any rate, the seeds which the
Martians (intentionally or accidentally) brought with them gave rise in all
cases to red-coloured growths. Only that known popularly as the red weed,
however, gained any footing in competition with terrestrial forms. The red
creeper was quite a transitory growth, and few people have seen it growing. For
a time, however, the red weed grew with astonishing vigour and luxuriance. It
spread up the sides of the pit by the third or fourth day of our imprisonment,
and its cactus-like branches formed a carmine fringe to the edges of our
triangular window. And afterwards I found it broadcast throughout the country,
and especially wherever there was a stream of water.</p>
<p>The Martians had what appears to have been an auditory organ, a single round
drum at the back of the head-body, and eyes with a visual range not very
different from ours except that, according to Philips, blue and violet were as
black to them. It is commonly supposed that they communicated by sounds and
tentacular gesticulations; this is asserted, for instance, in the able but
hastily compiled pamphlet (written evidently by someone not an eye-witness of
Martian actions) to which I have already alluded, and which, so far, has been
the chief source of information concerning them. Now no surviving human being
saw so much of the Martians in action as I did. I take no credit to myself for
an accident, but the fact is so. And I assert that I watched them closely time
after time, and that I have seen four, five, and (once) six of them sluggishly
performing the most elaborately complicated operations together without either
sound or gesture. Their peculiar hooting invariably preceded feeding; it had no
modulation, and was, I believe, in no sense a signal, but merely the expiration
of air preparatory to the suctional operation. I have a certain claim to at
least an elementary knowledge of psychology, and in this matter I am
convinced—as firmly as I am convinced of anything—that the Martians
interchanged thoughts without any physical intermediation. And I have been
convinced of this in spite of strong preconceptions. Before the Martian
invasion, as an occasional reader here or there may remember, I had written
with some little vehemence against the telepathic theory.</p>
<p>The Martians wore no clothing. Their conceptions of ornament and decorum were
necessarily different from ours; and not only were they evidently much less
sensible of changes of temperature than we are, but changes of pressure do not
seem to have affected their health at all seriously. Yet though they wore no
clothing, it was in the other artificial additions to their bodily resources
that their great superiority over man lay. We men, with our bicycles and
road-skates, our Lilienthal soaring-machines, our guns and sticks and so forth,
are just in the beginning of the evolution that the Martians have worked out.
They have become practically mere brains, wearing different bodies according to
their needs just as men wear suits of clothes and take a bicycle in a hurry or
an umbrella in the wet. And of their appliances, perhaps nothing is more
wonderful to a man than the curious fact that what is the dominant feature of
almost all human devices in mechanism is absent—the <i>wheel</i> is
absent; among all the things they brought to earth there is no trace or
suggestion of their use of wheels. One would have at least expected it in
locomotion. And in this connection it is curious to remark that even on this
earth Nature has never hit upon the wheel, or has preferred other expedients to
its development. And not only did the Martians either not know of (which is
incredible), or abstain from, the wheel, but in their apparatus singularly
little use is made of the fixed pivot or relatively fixed pivot, with circular
motions thereabout confined to one plane. Almost all the joints of the
machinery present a complicated system of sliding parts moving over small but
beautifully curved friction bearings. And while upon this matter of detail, it
is remarkable that the long leverages of their machines are in most cases
actuated by a sort of sham musculature of the disks in an elastic sheath; these
disks become polarised and drawn closely and powerfully together when traversed
by a current of electricity. In this way the curious parallelism to animal
motions, which was so striking and disturbing to the human beholder, was
attained. Such quasi-muscles abounded in the crablike handling-machine which,
on my first peeping out of the slit, I watched unpacking the cylinder. It
seemed infinitely more alive than the actual Martians lying beyond it in the
sunset light, panting, stirring ineffectual tentacles, and moving feebly after
their vast journey across space.</p>
<p>While I was still watching their sluggish motions in the sunlight, and noting
each strange detail of their form, the curate reminded me of his presence by
pulling violently at my arm. I turned to a scowling face, and silent, eloquent
lips. He wanted the slit, which permitted only one of us to peep through; and
so I had to forego watching them for a time while he enjoyed that privilege.</p>
<p>When I looked again, the busy handling-machine had already put together several
of the pieces of apparatus it had taken out of the cylinder into a shape having
an unmistakable likeness to its own; and down on the left a busy little digging
mechanism had come into view, emitting jets of green vapour and working its way
round the pit, excavating and embanking in a methodical and discriminating
manner. This it was which had caused the regular beating noise, and the
rhythmic shocks that had kept our ruinous refuge quivering. It piped and
whistled as it worked. So far as I could see, the thing was without a directing
Martian at all.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap20"></SPAN>III.<br/> THE DAYS OF IMPRISONMENT.</h2>
<p>The arrival of a second fighting-machine drove us from our peephole into the
scullery, for we feared that from his elevation the Martian might see down upon
us behind our barrier. At a later date we began to feel less in danger of their
eyes, for to an eye in the dazzle of the sunlight outside our refuge must have
been blank blackness, but at first the slightest suggestion of approach drove
us into the scullery in heart-throbbing retreat. Yet terrible as was the danger
we incurred, the attraction of peeping was for both of us irresistible. And I
recall now with a sort of wonder that, in spite of the infinite danger in which
we were between starvation and a still more terrible death, we could yet
struggle bitterly for that horrible privilege of sight. We would race across
the kitchen in a grotesque way between eagerness and the dread of making a
noise, and strike each other, and thrust and kick, within a few inches of
exposure.</p>
<p>The fact is that we had absolutely incompatible dispositions and habits of
thought and action, and our danger and isolation only accentuated the
incompatibility. At Halliford I had already come to hate the curate’s
trick of helpless exclamation, his stupid rigidity of mind. His endless
muttering monologue vitiated every effort I made to think out a line of action,
and drove me at times, thus pent up and intensified, almost to the verge of
craziness. He was as lacking in restraint as a silly woman. He would weep for
hours together, and I verily believe that to the very end this spoiled child of
life thought his weak tears in some way efficacious. And I would sit in the
darkness unable to keep my mind off him by reason of his importunities. He ate
more than I did, and it was in vain I pointed out that our only chance of life
was to stop in the house until the Martians had done with their pit, that in
that long patience a time might presently come when we should need food. He ate
and drank impulsively in heavy meals at long intervals. He slept little.</p>
<p>As the days wore on, his utter carelessness of any consideration so intensified
our distress and danger that I had, much as I loathed doing it, to resort to
threats, and at last to blows. That brought him to reason for a time. But he
was one of those weak creatures, void of pride, timorous, anæmic, hateful
souls, full of shifty cunning, who face neither God nor man, who face not even
themselves.</p>
<p>It is disagreeable for me to recall and write these things, but I set them down
that my story may lack nothing. Those who have escaped the dark and terrible
aspects of life will find my brutality, my flash of rage in our final tragedy,
easy enough to blame; for they know what is wrong as well as any, but not what
is possible to tortured men. But those who have been under the shadow, who have
gone down at last to elemental things, will have a wider charity.</p>
<p>And while within we fought out our dark, dim contest of whispers, snatched food
and drink, and gripping hands and blows, without, in the pitiless sunlight of
that terrible June, was the strange wonder, the unfamiliar routine of the
Martians in the pit. Let me return to those first new experiences of mine.
After a long time I ventured back to the peephole, to find that the new-comers
had been reinforced by the occupants of no fewer than three of the
fighting-machines. These last had brought with them certain fresh appliances
that stood in an orderly manner about the cylinder. The second handling-machine
was now completed, and was busied in serving one of the novel contrivances the
big machine had brought. This was a body resembling a milk can in its general
form, above which oscillated a pear-shaped receptacle, and from which a stream
of white powder flowed into a circular basin below.</p>
<p>The oscillatory motion was imparted to this by one tentacle of the
handling-machine. With two spatulate hands the handling-machine was digging out
and flinging masses of clay into the pear-shaped receptacle above, while with
another arm it periodically opened a door and removed rusty and blackened
clinkers from the middle part of the machine. Another steely tentacle directed
the powder from the basin along a ribbed channel towards some receiver that was
hidden from me by the mound of bluish dust. From this unseen receiver a little
thread of green smoke rose vertically into the quiet air. As I looked, the
handling-machine, with a faint and musical clinking, extended, telescopic
fashion, a tentacle that had been a moment before a mere blunt projection,
until its end was hidden behind the mound of clay. In another second it had
lifted a bar of white aluminium into sight, untarnished as yet, and shining
dazzlingly, and deposited it in a growing stack of bars that stood at the side
of the pit. Between sunset and starlight this dexterous machine must have made
more than a hundred such bars out of the crude clay, and the mound of bluish
dust rose steadily until it topped the side of the pit.</p>
<p>The contrast between the swift and complex movements of these contrivances and
the inert panting clumsiness of their masters was acute, and for days I had to
tell myself repeatedly that these latter were indeed the living of the two
things.</p>
<p>The curate had possession of the slit when the first men were brought to the
pit. I was sitting below, huddled up, listening with all my ears. He made a
sudden movement backward, and I, fearful that we were observed, crouched in a
spasm of terror. He came sliding down the rubbish and crept beside me in the
darkness, inarticulate, gesticulating, and for a moment I shared his panic. His
gesture suggested a resignation of the slit, and after a little while my
curiosity gave me courage, and I rose up, stepped across him, and clambered up
to it. At first I could see no reason for his frantic behaviour. The twilight
had now come, the stars were little and faint, but the pit was illuminated by
the flickering green fire that came from the aluminium-making. The whole
picture was a flickering scheme of green gleams and shifting rusty black
shadows, strangely trying to the eyes. Over and through it all went the bats,
heeding it not at all. The sprawling Martians were no longer to be seen, the
mound of blue-green powder had risen to cover them from sight, and a
fighting-machine, with its legs contracted, crumpled, and abbreviated, stood
across the corner of the pit. And then, amid the clangour of the machinery,
came a drifting suspicion of human voices, that I entertained at first only to
dismiss.</p>
<p>I crouched, watching this fighting-machine closely, satisfying myself now for
the first time that the hood did indeed contain a Martian. As the green flames
lifted I could see the oily gleam of his integument and the brightness of his
eyes. And suddenly I heard a yell, and saw a long tentacle reaching over the
shoulder of the machine to the little cage that hunched upon its back. Then
something—something struggling violently—was lifted high against
the sky, a black, vague enigma against the starlight; and as this black object
came down again, I saw by the green brightness that it was a man. For an
instant he was clearly visible. He was a stout, ruddy, middle-aged man, well
dressed; three days before, he must have been walking the world, a man of
considerable consequence. I could see his staring eyes and gleams of light on
his studs and watch chain. He vanished behind the mound, and for a moment there
was silence. And then began a shrieking and a sustained and cheerful hooting
from the Martians.</p>
<p>I slid down the rubbish, struggled to my feet, clapped my hands over my ears,
and bolted into the scullery. The curate, who had been crouching silently with
his arms over his head, looked up as I passed, cried out quite loudly at my
desertion of him, and came running after me.</p>
<p>That night, as we lurked in the scullery, balanced between our horror and the
terrible fascination this peeping had, although I felt an urgent need of action
I tried in vain to conceive some plan of escape; but afterwards, during the
second day, I was able to consider our position with great clearness. The
curate, I found, was quite incapable of discussion; this new and culminating
atrocity had robbed him of all vestiges of reason or forethought. Practically
he had already sunk to the level of an animal. But as the saying goes, I
gripped myself with both hands. It grew upon my mind, once I could face the
facts, that terrible as our position was, there was as yet no justification for
absolute despair. Our chief chance lay in the possibility of the Martians
making the pit nothing more than a temporary encampment. Or even if they kept
it permanently, they might not consider it necessary to guard it, and a chance
of escape might be afforded us. I also weighed very carefully the possibility
of our digging a way out in a direction away from the pit, but the chances of
our emerging within sight of some sentinel fighting-machine seemed at first too
great. And I should have had to do all the digging myself. The curate would
certainly have failed me.</p>
<p>It was on the third day, if my memory serves me right, that I saw the lad
killed. It was the only occasion on which I actually saw the Martians feed.
After that experience I avoided the hole in the wall for the better part of a
day. I went into the scullery, removed the door, and spent some hours digging
with my hatchet as silently as possible; but when I had made a hole about a
couple of feet deep the loose earth collapsed noisily, and I did not dare
continue. I lost heart, and lay down on the scullery floor for a long time,
having no spirit even to move. And after that I abandoned altogether the idea
of escaping by excavation.</p>
<p>It says much for the impression the Martians had made upon me that at first I
entertained little or no hope of our escape being brought about by their
overthrow through any human effort. But on the fourth or fifth night I heard a
sound like heavy guns.</p>
<p>It was very late in the night, and the moon was shining brightly. The Martians
had taken away the excavating-machine, and, save for a fighting-machine that
stood in the remoter bank of the pit and a handling-machine that was buried out
of my sight in a corner of the pit immediately beneath my peephole, the place
was deserted by them. Except for the pale glow from the handling-machine and
the bars and patches of white moonlight the pit was in darkness, and, except
for the clinking of the handling-machine, quite still. That night was a
beautiful serenity; save for one planet, the moon seemed to have the sky to
herself. I heard a dog howling, and that familiar sound it was that made me
listen. Then I heard quite distinctly a booming exactly like the sound of great
guns. Six distinct reports I counted, and after a long interval six again. And
that was all.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap21"></SPAN>IV.<br/> THE DEATH OF THE CURATE.</h2>
<p>It was on the sixth day of our imprisonment that I peeped for the last time,
and presently found myself alone. Instead of keeping close to me and trying to
oust me from the slit, the curate had gone back into the scullery. I was struck
by a sudden thought. I went back quickly and quietly into the scullery. In the
darkness I heard the curate drinking. I snatched in the darkness, and my
fingers caught a bottle of burgundy.</p>
<p>For a few minutes there was a tussle. The bottle struck the floor and broke,
and I desisted and rose. We stood panting and threatening each other. In the
end I planted myself between him and the food, and told him of my determination
to begin a discipline. I divided the food in the pantry, into rations to last
us ten days. I would not let him eat any more that day. In the afternoon he
made a feeble effort to get at the food. I had been dozing, but in an instant I
was awake. All day and all night we sat face to face, I weary but resolute, and
he weeping and complaining of his immediate hunger. It was, I know, a night and
a day, but to me it seemed—it seems now—an interminable length of
time.</p>
<p>And so our widened incompatibility ended at last in open conflict. For two vast
days we struggled in undertones and wrestling contests. There were times when I
beat and kicked him madly, times when I cajoled and persuaded him, and once I
tried to bribe him with the last bottle of burgundy, for there was a rain-water
pump from which I could get water. But neither force nor kindness availed; he
was indeed beyond reason. He would neither desist from his attacks on the food
nor from his noisy babbling to himself. The rudimentary precautions to keep our
imprisonment endurable he would not observe. Slowly I began to realise the
complete overthrow of his intelligence, to perceive that my sole companion in
this close and sickly darkness was a man insane.</p>
<p>From certain vague memories I am inclined to think my own mind wandered at
times. I had strange and hideous dreams whenever I slept. It sounds
paradoxical, but I am inclined to think that the weakness and insanity of the
curate warned me, braced me, and kept me a sane man.</p>
<p>On the eighth day he began to talk aloud instead of whispering, and nothing I
could do would moderate his speech.</p>
<p>“It is just, O God!” he would say, over and over again. “It
is just. On me and mine be the punishment laid. We have sinned, we have fallen
short. There was poverty, sorrow; the poor were trodden in the dust, and I held
my peace. I preached acceptable folly—my God, what folly!—when I
should have stood up, though I died for it, and called upon them to
repent—repent! . . . Oppressors of the poor and needy . . . ! The wine
press of God!”</p>
<p>Then he would suddenly revert to the matter of the food I withheld from him,
praying, begging, weeping, at last threatening. He began to raise his
voice—I prayed him not to. He perceived a hold on me—he threatened
he would shout and bring the Martians upon us. For a time that scared me; but
any concession would have shortened our chance of escape beyond estimating. I
defied him, although I felt no assurance that he might not do this thing. But
that day, at any rate, he did not. He talked with his voice rising slowly,
through the greater part of the eighth and ninth days—threats,
entreaties, mingled with a torrent of half-sane and always frothy repentance
for his vacant sham of God’s service, such as made me pity him. Then he
slept awhile, and began again with renewed strength, so loudly that I must
needs make him desist.</p>
<p>“Be still!” I implored.</p>
<p>He rose to his knees, for he had been sitting in the darkness near the copper.</p>
<p>“I have been still too long,” he said, in a tone that must have
reached the pit, “and now I must bear my witness. Woe unto this
unfaithful city! Woe! Woe! Woe! Woe! Woe! To the inhabitants of the earth by
reason of the other voices of the trumpet——”</p>
<p>“Shut up!” I said, rising to my feet, and in a terror lest the
Martians should hear us. “For God’s sake——”</p>
<p>“Nay,” shouted the curate, at the top of his voice, standing
likewise and extending his arms. “Speak! The word of the Lord is upon
me!”</p>
<p>In three strides he was at the door leading into the kitchen.</p>
<p>“I must bear my witness! I go! It has already been too long
delayed.”</p>
<p>I put out my hand and felt the meat chopper hanging to the wall. In a flash I
was after him. I was fierce with fear. Before he was halfway across the kitchen
I had overtaken him. With one last touch of humanity I turned the blade back
and struck him with the butt. He went headlong forward and lay stretched on the
ground. I stumbled over him and stood panting. He lay still.</p>
<p>Suddenly I heard a noise without, the run and smash of slipping plaster, and
the triangular aperture in the wall was darkened. I looked up and saw the lower
surface of a handling-machine coming slowly across the hole. One of its
gripping limbs curled amid the debris; another limb appeared, feeling its way
over the fallen beams. I stood petrified, staring. Then I saw through a sort of
glass plate near the edge of the body the face, as we may call it, and the
large dark eyes of a Martian, peering, and then a long metallic snake of
tentacle came feeling slowly through the hole.</p>
<p>I turned by an effort, stumbled over the curate, and stopped at the scullery
door. The tentacle was now some way, two yards or more, in the room, and
twisting and turning, with queer sudden movements, this way and that. For a
while I stood fascinated by that slow, fitful advance. Then, with a faint,
hoarse cry, I forced myself across the scullery. I trembled violently; I could
scarcely stand upright. I opened the door of the coal cellar, and stood there
in the darkness staring at the faintly lit doorway into the kitchen, and
listening. Had the Martian seen me? What was it doing now?</p>
<p>Something was moving to and fro there, very quietly; every now and then it
tapped against the wall, or started on its movements with a faint metallic
ringing, like the movements of keys on a split-ring. Then a heavy body—I
knew too well what—was dragged across the floor of the kitchen towards
the opening. Irresistibly attracted, I crept to the door and peeped into the
kitchen. In the triangle of bright outer sunlight I saw the Martian, in its
Briareus of a handling-machine, scrutinizing the curate’s head. I thought
at once that it would infer my presence from the mark of the blow I had given
him.</p>
<p>I crept back to the coal cellar, shut the door, and began to cover myself up as
much as I could, and as noiselessly as possible in the darkness, among the
firewood and coal therein. Every now and then I paused, rigid, to hear if the
Martian had thrust its tentacles through the opening again.</p>
<p>Then the faint metallic jingle returned. I traced it slowly feeling over the
kitchen. Presently I heard it nearer—in the scullery, as I judged. I
thought that its length might be insufficient to reach me. I prayed copiously.
It passed, scraping faintly across the cellar door. An age of almost
intolerable suspense intervened; then I heard it fumbling at the latch! It had
found the door! The Martians understood doors!</p>
<p>It worried at the catch for a minute, perhaps, and then the door opened.</p>
<p>In the darkness I could just see the thing—like an elephant’s trunk
more than anything else—waving towards me and touching and examining the
wall, coals, wood and ceiling. It was like a black worm swaying its blind head
to and fro.</p>
<p>Once, even, it touched the heel of my boot. I was on the verge of screaming; I
bit my hand. For a time the tentacle was silent. I could have fancied it had
been withdrawn. Presently, with an abrupt click, it gripped something—I
thought it had me!—and seemed to go out of the cellar again. For a minute
I was not sure. Apparently it had taken a lump of coal to examine.</p>
<p>I seized the opportunity of slightly shifting my position, which had become
cramped, and then listened. I whispered passionate prayers for safety.</p>
<p>Then I heard the slow, deliberate sound creeping towards me again. Slowly,
slowly it drew near, scratching against the walls and tapping the furniture.</p>
<p>While I was still doubtful, it rapped smartly against the cellar door and
closed it. I heard it go into the pantry, and the biscuit-tins rattled and a
bottle smashed, and then came a heavy bump against the cellar door. Then
silence that passed into an infinity of suspense.</p>
<p>Had it gone?</p>
<p>At last I decided that it had.</p>
<p>It came into the scullery no more; but I lay all the tenth day in the close
darkness, buried among coals and firewood, not daring even to crawl out for the
drink for which I craved. It was the eleventh day before I ventured so far from
my security.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap22"></SPAN>V.<br/> THE STILLNESS.</h2>
<p>My first act before I went into the pantry was to fasten the door between the
kitchen and the scullery. But the pantry was empty; every scrap of food had
gone. Apparently, the Martian had taken it all on the previous day. At that
discovery I despaired for the first time. I took no food, or no drink either,
on the eleventh or the twelfth day.</p>
<p>At first my mouth and throat were parched, and my strength ebbed sensibly. I
sat about in the darkness of the scullery, in a state of despondent
wretchedness. My mind ran on eating. I thought I had become deaf, for the
noises of movement I had been accustomed to hear from the pit had ceased
absolutely. I did not feel strong enough to crawl noiselessly to the peephole,
or I would have gone there.</p>
<p>On the twelfth day my throat was so painful that, taking the chance of alarming
the Martians, I attacked the creaking rain-water pump that stood by the sink,
and got a couple of glassfuls of blackened and tainted rain water. I was
greatly refreshed by this, and emboldened by the fact that no enquiring
tentacle followed the noise of my pumping.</p>
<p>During these days, in a rambling, inconclusive way, I thought much of the
curate and of the manner of his death.</p>
<p>On the thirteenth day I drank some more water, and dozed and thought
disjointedly of eating and of vague impossible plans of escape. Whenever I
dozed I dreamt of horrible phantasms, of the death of the curate, or of
sumptuous dinners; but, asleep or awake, I felt a keen pain that urged me to
drink again and again. The light that came into the scullery was no longer
grey, but red. To my disordered imagination it seemed the colour of blood.</p>
<p>On the fourteenth day I went into the kitchen, and I was surprised to find that
the fronds of the red weed had grown right across the hole in the wall, turning
the half-light of the place into a crimson-coloured obscurity.</p>
<p>It was early on the fifteenth day that I heard a curious, familiar sequence of
sounds in the kitchen, and, listening, identified it as the snuffing and
scratching of a dog. Going into the kitchen, I saw a dog’s nose peering
in through a break among the ruddy fronds. This greatly surprised me. At the
scent of me he barked shortly.</p>
<p>I thought if I could induce him to come into the place quietly I should be
able, perhaps, to kill and eat him; and in any case, it would be advisable to
kill him, lest his actions attracted the attention of the Martians.</p>
<p>I crept forward, saying “Good dog!” very softly; but he suddenly
withdrew his head and disappeared.</p>
<p>I listened—I was not deaf—but certainly the pit was still. I heard
a sound like the flutter of a bird’s wings, and a hoarse croaking, but
that was all.</p>
<p>For a long while I lay close to the peephole, but not daring to move aside the
red plants that obscured it. Once or twice I heard a faint pitter-patter like
the feet of the dog going hither and thither on the sand far below me, and
there were more birdlike sounds, but that was all. At length, encouraged by the
silence, I looked out.</p>
<p>Except in the corner, where a multitude of crows hopped and fought over the
skeletons of the dead the Martians had consumed, there was not a living thing
in the pit.</p>
<p>I stared about me, scarcely believing my eyes. All the machinery had gone. Save
for the big mound of greyish-blue powder in one corner, certain bars of
aluminium in another, the black birds, and the skeletons of the killed, the
place was merely an empty circular pit in the sand.</p>
<p>Slowly I thrust myself out through the red weed, and stood upon the mound of
rubble. I could see in any direction save behind me, to the north, and neither
Martians nor sign of Martians were to be seen. The pit dropped sheerly from my
feet, but a little way along the rubbish afforded a practicable slope to the
summit of the ruins. My chance of escape had come. I began to tremble.</p>
<p>I hesitated for some time, and then, in a gust of desperate resolution, and
with a heart that throbbed violently, I scrambled to the top of the mound in
which I had been buried so long.</p>
<p>I looked about again. To the northward, too, no Martian was visible.</p>
<p>When I had last seen this part of Sheen in the daylight it had been a
straggling street of comfortable white and red houses, interspersed with
abundant shady trees. Now I stood on a mound of smashed brickwork, clay, and
gravel, over which spread a multitude of red cactus-shaped plants, knee-high,
without a solitary terrestrial growth to dispute their footing. The trees near
me were dead and brown, but further a network of red thread scaled the still
living stems.</p>
<p>The neighbouring houses had all been wrecked, but none had been burned; their
walls stood, sometimes to the second story, with smashed windows and shattered
doors. The red weed grew tumultuously in their roofless rooms. Below me was the
great pit, with the crows struggling for its refuse. A number of other birds
hopped about among the ruins. Far away I saw a gaunt cat slink crouchingly
along a wall, but traces of men there were none.</p>
<p>The day seemed, by contrast with my recent confinement, dazzlingly bright, the
sky a glowing blue. A gentle breeze kept the red weed that covered every scrap
of unoccupied ground gently swaying. And oh! the sweetness of the air!</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap23"></SPAN>VI.<br/> THE WORK OF FIFTEEN DAYS.</h2>
<p>For some time I stood tottering on the mound regardless of my safety. Within
that noisome den from which I had emerged I had thought with a narrow intensity
only of our immediate security. I had not realised what had been happening to
the world, had not anticipated this startling vision of unfamiliar things. I
had expected to see Sheen in ruins—I found about me the landscape, weird
and lurid, of another planet.</p>
<p>For that moment I touched an emotion beyond the common range of men, yet one
that the poor brutes we dominate know only too well. I felt as a rabbit might
feel returning to his burrow and suddenly confronted by the work of a dozen
busy navvies digging the foundations of a house. I felt the first inkling of a
thing that presently grew quite clear in my mind, that oppressed me for many
days, a sense of dethronement, a persuasion that I was no longer a master, but
an animal among the animals, under the Martian heel. With us it would be as
with them, to lurk and watch, to run and hide; the fear and empire of man had
passed away.</p>
<p>But so soon as this strangeness had been realised it passed, and my dominant
motive became the hunger of my long and dismal fast. In the direction away from
the pit I saw, beyond a red-covered wall, a patch of garden ground unburied.
This gave me a hint, and I went knee-deep, and sometimes neck-deep, in the red
weed. The density of the weed gave me a reassuring sense of hiding. The wall
was some six feet high, and when I attempted to clamber it I found I could not
lift my feet to the crest. So I went along by the side of it, and came to a
corner and a rockwork that enabled me to get to the top, and tumble into the
garden I coveted. Here I found some young onions, a couple of gladiolus bulbs,
and a quantity of immature carrots, all of which I secured, and, scrambling
over a ruined wall, went on my way through scarlet and crimson trees towards
Kew—it was like walking through an avenue of gigantic blood
drops—possessed with two ideas: to get more food, and to limp, as soon
and as far as my strength permitted, out of this accursed unearthly region of
the pit.</p>
<p>Some way farther, in a grassy place, was a group of mushrooms which also I
devoured, and then I came upon a brown sheet of flowing shallow water, where
meadows used to be. These fragments of nourishment served only to whet my
hunger. At first I was surprised at this flood in a hot, dry summer, but
afterwards I discovered that it was caused by the tropical exuberance of the
red weed. Directly this extraordinary growth encountered water it straightway
became gigantic and of unparalleled fecundity. Its seeds were simply poured
down into the water of the Wey and Thames, and its swiftly growing and Titanic
water fronds speedily choked both those rivers.</p>
<p>At Putney, as I afterwards saw, the bridge was almost lost in a tangle of this
weed, and at Richmond, too, the Thames water poured in a broad and shallow
stream across the meadows of Hampton and Twickenham. As the water spread the
weed followed them, until the ruined villas of the Thames valley were for a
time lost in this red swamp, whose margin I explored, and much of the
desolation the Martians had caused was concealed.</p>
<p>In the end the red weed succumbed almost as quickly as it had spread. A
cankering disease, due, it is believed, to the action of certain bacteria,
presently seized upon it. Now by the action of natural selection, all
terrestrial plants have acquired a resisting power against bacterial
diseases—they never succumb without a severe struggle, but the red weed
rotted like a thing already dead. The fronds became bleached, and then
shrivelled and brittle. They broke off at the least touch, and the waters that
had stimulated their early growth carried their last vestiges out to sea.</p>
<p>My first act on coming to this water was, of course, to slake my thirst. I
drank a great deal of it and, moved by an impulse, gnawed some fronds of red
weed; but they were watery, and had a sickly, metallic taste. I found the water
was sufficiently shallow for me to wade securely, although the red weed impeded
my feet a little; but the flood evidently got deeper towards the river, and I
turned back to Mortlake. I managed to make out the road by means of occasional
ruins of its villas and fences and lamps, and so presently I got out of this
spate and made my way to the hill going up towards Roehampton and came out on
Putney Common.</p>
<p>Here the scenery changed from the strange and unfamiliar to the wreckage of the
familiar: patches of ground exhibited the devastation of a cyclone, and in a
few score yards I would come upon perfectly undisturbed spaces, houses with
their blinds trimly drawn and doors closed, as if they had been left for a day
by the owners, or as if their inhabitants slept within. The red weed was less
abundant; the tall trees along the lane were free from the red creeper. I
hunted for food among the trees, finding nothing, and I also raided a couple of
silent houses, but they had already been broken into and ransacked. I rested
for the remainder of the daylight in a shrubbery, being, in my enfeebled
condition, too fatigued to push on.</p>
<p>All this time I saw no human beings, and no signs of the Martians. I
encountered a couple of hungry-looking dogs, but both hurried circuitously away
from the advances I made them. Near Roehampton I had seen two human
skeletons—not bodies, but skeletons, picked clean—and in the wood
by me I found the crushed and scattered bones of several cats and rabbits and
the skull of a sheep. But though I gnawed parts of these in my mouth, there was
nothing to be got from them.</p>
<p>After sunset I struggled on along the road towards Putney, where I think the
Heat-Ray must have been used for some reason. And in the garden beyond
Roehampton I got a quantity of immature potatoes, sufficient to stay my hunger.
From this garden one looked down upon Putney and the river. The aspect of the
place in the dusk was singularly desolate: blackened trees, blackened, desolate
ruins, and down the hill the sheets of the flooded river, red-tinged with the
weed. And over all—silence. It filled me with indescribable terror to
think how swiftly that desolating change had come.</p>
<p>For a time I believed that mankind had been swept out of existence, and that I
stood there alone, the last man left alive. Hard by the top of Putney Hill I
came upon another skeleton, with the arms dislocated and removed several yards
from the rest of the body. As I proceeded I became more and more convinced that
the extermination of mankind was, save for such stragglers as myself, already
accomplished in this part of the world. The Martians, I thought, had gone on
and left the country desolated, seeking food elsewhere. Perhaps even now they
were destroying Berlin or Paris, or it might be they had gone northward.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap24"></SPAN>VII.<br/> THE MAN ON PUTNEY HILL.</h2>
<p>I spent that night in the inn that stands at the top of Putney Hill, sleeping
in a made bed for the first time since my flight to Leatherhead. I will not
tell the needless trouble I had breaking into that house—afterwards I
found the front door was on the latch—nor how I ransacked every room for
food, until just on the verge of despair, in what seemed to me to be a
servant’s bedroom, I found a rat-gnawed crust and two tins of pineapple.
The place had been already searched and emptied. In the bar I afterwards found
some biscuits and sandwiches that had been overlooked. The latter I could not
eat, they were too rotten, but the former not only stayed my hunger, but filled
my pockets. I lit no lamps, fearing some Martian might come beating that part
of London for food in the night. Before I went to bed I had an interval of
restlessness, and prowled from window to window, peering out for some sign of
these monsters. I slept little. As I lay in bed I found myself thinking
consecutively—a thing I do not remember to have done since my last
argument with the curate. During all the intervening time my mental condition
had been a hurrying succession of vague emotional states or a sort of stupid
receptivity. But in the night my brain, reinforced, I suppose, by the food I
had eaten, grew clear again, and I thought.</p>
<p>Three things struggled for possession of my mind: the killing of the curate,
the whereabouts of the Martians, and the possible fate of my wife. The former
gave me no sensation of horror or remorse to recall; I saw it simply as a thing
done, a memory infinitely disagreeable but quite without the quality of
remorse. I saw myself then as I see myself now, driven step by step towards
that hasty blow, the creature of a sequence of accidents leading inevitably to
that. I felt no condemnation; yet the memory, static, unprogressive, haunted
me. In the silence of the night, with that sense of the nearness of God that
sometimes comes into the stillness and the darkness, I stood my trial, my only
trial, for that moment of wrath and fear. I retraced every step of our
conversation from the moment when I had found him crouching beside me, heedless
of my thirst, and pointing to the fire and smoke that streamed up from the
ruins of Weybridge. We had been incapable of co-operation—grim chance had
taken no heed of that. Had I foreseen, I should have left him at Halliford. But
I did not foresee; and crime is to foresee and do. And I set this down as I
have set all this story down, as it was. There were no witnesses—all
these things I might have concealed. But I set it down, and the reader must
form his judgment as he will.</p>
<p>And when, by an effort, I had set aside that picture of a prostrate body, I
faced the problem of the Martians and the fate of my wife. For the former I had
no data; I could imagine a hundred things, and so, unhappily, I could for the
latter. And suddenly that night became terrible. I found myself sitting up in
bed, staring at the dark. I found myself praying that the Heat-Ray might have
suddenly and painlessly struck her out of being. Since the night of my return
from Leatherhead I had not prayed. I had uttered prayers, fetish prayers, had
prayed as heathens mutter charms when I was in extremity; but now I prayed
indeed, pleading steadfastly and sanely, face to face with the darkness of God.
Strange night! Strangest in this, that so soon as dawn had come, I, who had
talked with God, crept out of the house like a rat leaving its hiding
place—a creature scarcely larger, an inferior animal, a thing that for
any passing whim of our masters might be hunted and killed. Perhaps they also
prayed confidently to God. Surely, if we have learned nothing else, this war
has taught us pity—pity for those witless souls that suffer our dominion.</p>
<p>The morning was bright and fine, and the eastern sky glowed pink, and was
fretted with little golden clouds. In the road that runs from the top of Putney
Hill to Wimbledon was a number of poor vestiges of the panic torrent that must
have poured Londonward on the Sunday night after the fighting began. There was
a little two-wheeled cart inscribed with the name of Thomas Lobb, Greengrocer,
New Malden, with a smashed wheel and an abandoned tin trunk; there was a straw
hat trampled into the now hardened mud, and at the top of West Hill a lot of
blood-stained glass about the overturned water trough. My movements were
languid, my plans of the vaguest. I had an idea of going to Leatherhead, though
I knew that there I had the poorest chance of finding my wife. Certainly,
unless death had overtaken them suddenly, my cousins and she would have fled
thence; but it seemed to me I might find or learn there whither the Surrey
people had fled. I knew I wanted to find my wife, that my heart ached for her
and the world of men, but I had no clear idea how the finding might be done. I
was also sharply aware now of my intense loneliness. From the corner I went,
under cover of a thicket of trees and bushes, to the edge of Wimbledon Common,
stretching wide and far.</p>
<p>That dark expanse was lit in patches by yellow gorse and broom; there was no
red weed to be seen, and as I prowled, hesitating, on the verge of the open,
the sun rose, flooding it all with light and vitality. I came upon a busy swarm
of little frogs in a swampy place among the trees. I stopped to look at them,
drawing a lesson from their stout resolve to live. And presently, turning
suddenly, with an odd feeling of being watched, I beheld something crouching
amid a clump of bushes. I stood regarding this. I made a step towards it, and
it rose up and became a man armed with a cutlass. I approached him slowly. He
stood silent and motionless, regarding me.</p>
<p>As I drew nearer I perceived he was dressed in clothes as dusty and filthy as
my own; he looked, indeed, as though he had been dragged through a culvert.
Nearer, I distinguished the green slime of ditches mixing with the pale drab of
dried clay and shiny, coaly patches. His black hair fell over his eyes, and his
face was dark and dirty and sunken, so that at first I did not recognise him.
There was a red cut across the lower part of his face.</p>
<p>“Stop!” he cried, when I was within ten yards of him, and I
stopped. His voice was hoarse. “Where do you come from?” he said.</p>
<p>I thought, surveying him.</p>
<p>“I come from Mortlake,” I said. “I was buried near the pit
the Martians made about their cylinder. I have worked my way out and
escaped.”</p>
<p>“There is no food about here,” he said. “This is my country.
All this hill down to the river, and back to Clapham, and up to the edge of the
common. There is only food for one. Which way are you going?”</p>
<p>I answered slowly.</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” I said. “I have been buried in the
ruins of a house thirteen or fourteen days. I don’t know what has
happened.”</p>
<p>He looked at me doubtfully, then started, and looked with a changed expression.</p>
<p>“I’ve no wish to stop about here,” said I. “I think I
shall go to Leatherhead, for my wife was there.”</p>
<p>He shot out a pointing finger.</p>
<p>“It is you,” said he; “the man from Woking. And you
weren’t killed at Weybridge?”</p>
<p>I recognised him at the same moment.</p>
<p>“You are the artilleryman who came into my garden.”</p>
<p>“Good luck!” he said. “We are lucky ones! Fancy
<i>you</i>!” He put out a hand, and I took it. “I crawled up a
drain,” he said. “But they didn’t kill everyone. And after
they went away I got off towards Walton across the fields. But——
It’s not sixteen days altogether—and your hair is grey.” He
looked over his shoulder suddenly. “Only a rook,” he said.
“One gets to know that birds have shadows these days. This is a bit open.
Let us crawl under those bushes and talk.”</p>
<p>“Have you seen any Martians?” I said. “Since I crawled
out——”</p>
<p>“They’ve gone away across London,” he said. “I guess
they’ve got a bigger camp there. Of a night, all over there, Hampstead
way, the sky is alive with their lights. It’s like a great city, and in
the glare you can just see them moving. By daylight you can’t. But
nearer—I haven’t seen them—” (he counted on his
fingers) “five days. Then I saw a couple across Hammersmith way carrying
something big. And the night before last”—he stopped and spoke
impressively—“it was just a matter of lights, but it was something
up in the air. I believe they’ve built a flying-machine, and are learning
to fly.”</p>
<p>I stopped, on hands and knees, for we had come to the bushes.</p>
<p>“Fly!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said, “fly.”</p>
<p>I went on into a little bower, and sat down.</p>
<p>“It is all over with humanity,” I said. “If they can do that
they will simply go round the world.”</p>
<p>He nodded.</p>
<p>“They will. But—— It will relieve things over here a bit. And
besides——” He looked at me. “Aren’t you satisfied
it <i>is</i> up with humanity? I am. We’re down; we’re beat.”</p>
<p>I stared. Strange as it may seem, I had not arrived at this fact—a fact
perfectly obvious so soon as he spoke. I had still held a vague hope; rather, I
had kept a lifelong habit of mind. He repeated his words, “We’re
beat.” They carried absolute conviction.</p>
<p>“It’s all over,” he said. “They’ve lost
<i>one</i>—just <i>one</i>. And they’ve made their footing good and
crippled the greatest power in the world. They’ve walked over us. The
death of that one at Weybridge was an accident. And these are only pioneers.
They kept on coming. These green stars—I’ve seen none these five or
six days, but I’ve no doubt they’re falling somewhere every night.
Nothing’s to be done. We’re under! We’re beat!”</p>
<p>I made him no answer. I sat staring before me, trying in vain to devise some
countervailing thought.</p>
<p>“This isn’t a war,” said the artilleryman. “It never
was a war, any more than there’s war between man and ants.”</p>
<p>Suddenly I recalled the night in the observatory.</p>
<p>“After the tenth shot they fired no more—at least, until the first
cylinder came.”</p>
<p>“How do you know?” said the artilleryman. I explained. He thought.
“Something wrong with the gun,” he said. “But what if there
is? They’ll get it right again. And even if there’s a delay, how
can it alter the end? It’s just men and ants. There’s the ants
builds their cities, live their lives, have wars, revolutions, until the men
want them out of the way, and then they go out of the way. That’s what we
are now—just ants. Only——”</p>
<p>“Yes,” I said.</p>
<p>“We’re eatable ants.”</p>
<p>We sat looking at each other.</p>
<p>“And what will they do with us?” I said.</p>
<p>“That’s what I’ve been thinking,” he said;
“that’s what I’ve been thinking. After Weybridge I went
south—thinking. I saw what was up. Most of the people were hard at it
squealing and exciting themselves. But I’m not so fond of squealing.
I’ve been in sight of death once or twice; I’m not an ornamental
soldier, and at the best and worst, death—it’s just death. And
it’s the man that keeps on thinking comes through. I saw everyone
tracking away south. Says I, ‘Food won’t last this way,’ and
I turned right back. I went for the Martians like a sparrow goes for man. All
round”—he waved a hand to the horizon—“they’re
starving in heaps, bolting, treading on each other. . . .”</p>
<p>He saw my face, and halted awkwardly.</p>
<p>“No doubt lots who had money have gone away to France,” he said. He
seemed to hesitate whether to apologise, met my eyes, and went on:
“There’s food all about here. Canned things in shops; wines,
spirits, mineral waters; and the water mains and drains are empty. Well, I was
telling you what I was thinking. ‘Here’s intelligent things,’
I said, ‘and it seems they want us for food. First, they’ll smash
us up—ships, machines, guns, cities, all the order and organisation. All
that will go. If we were the size of ants we might pull through. But
we’re not. It’s all too bulky to stop. That’s the first
certainty.’ Eh?”</p>
<p>I assented.</p>
<p>“It is; I’ve thought it out. Very well, then—next; at present
we’re caught as we’re wanted. A Martian has only to go a few miles
to get a crowd on the run. And I saw one, one day, out by Wandsworth, picking
houses to pieces and routing among the wreckage. But they won’t keep on
doing that. So soon as they’ve settled all our guns and ships, and
smashed our railways, and done all the things they are doing over there, they
will begin catching us systematic, picking the best and storing us in cages and
things. That’s what they will start doing in a bit. Lord! They
haven’t begun on us yet. Don’t you see that?”</p>
<p>“Not begun!” I exclaimed.</p>
<p>“Not begun. All that’s happened so far is through our not having
the sense to keep quiet—worrying them with guns and such foolery. And
losing our heads, and rushing off in crowds to where there wasn’t any
more safety than where we were. They don’t want to bother us yet.
They’re making their things—making all the things they
couldn’t bring with them, getting things ready for the rest of their
people. Very likely that’s why the cylinders have stopped for a bit, for
fear of hitting those who are here. And instead of our rushing about blind, on
the howl, or getting dynamite on the chance of busting them up, we’ve got
to fix ourselves up according to the new state of affairs. That’s how I
figure it out. It isn’t quite according to what a man wants for his
species, but it’s about what the facts point to. And that’s the
principle I acted upon. Cities, nations, civilisation,
progress—it’s all over. That game’s up. We’re
beat.”</p>
<p>“But if that is so, what is there to live for?”</p>
<p>The artilleryman looked at me for a moment.</p>
<p>“There won’t be any more blessed concerts for a million years or
so; there won’t be any Royal Academy of Arts, and no nice little feeds at
restaurants. If it’s amusement you’re after, I reckon the game is
up. If you’ve got any drawing-room manners or a dislike to eating peas
with a knife or dropping aitches, you’d better chuck ’em away. They
ain’t no further use.”</p>
<p>“You mean——”</p>
<p>“I mean that men like me are going on living—for the sake of the
breed. I tell you, I’m grim set on living. And if I’m not mistaken,
you’ll show what insides <i>you’ve</i> got, too, before long. We
aren’t going to be exterminated. And I don’t mean to be caught
either, and tamed and fattened and bred like a thundering ox. Ugh! Fancy those
brown creepers!”</p>
<p>“You don’t mean to say——”</p>
<p>“I do. I’m going on, under their feet. I’ve got it planned;
I’ve thought it out. We men are beat. We don’t know enough.
We’ve got to learn before we’ve got a chance. And we’ve got
to live and keep independent while we learn. See! That’s what has to be
done.”</p>
<p>I stared, astonished, and stirred profoundly by the man’s resolution.</p>
<p>“Great God!” cried I. “But you are a man indeed!” And
suddenly I gripped his hand.</p>
<p>“Eh!” he said, with his eyes shining. “I’ve thought it
out, eh?”</p>
<p>“Go on,” I said.</p>
<p>“Well, those who mean to escape their catching must get ready. I’m
getting ready. Mind you, it isn’t all of us that are made for wild
beasts; and that’s what it’s got to be. That’s why I watched
you. I had my doubts. You’re slender. I didn’t know that it was
you, you see, or just how you’d been buried. All these—the sort of
people that lived in these houses, and all those damn little clerks that used
to live down <i>that</i> way—they’d be no good. They haven’t
any spirit in them—no proud dreams and no proud lusts; and a man who
hasn’t one or the other—Lord! What is he but funk and precautions?
They just used to skedaddle off to work—I’ve seen hundreds of
’em, bit of breakfast in hand, running wild and shining to catch their
little season-ticket train, for fear they’d get dismissed if they
didn’t; working at businesses they were afraid to take the trouble to
understand; skedaddling back for fear they wouldn’t be in time for
dinner; keeping indoors after dinner for fear of the back streets, and sleeping
with the wives they married, not because they wanted them, but because they had
a bit of money that would make for safety in their one little miserable
skedaddle through the world. Lives insured and a bit invested for fear of
accidents. And on Sundays—fear of the hereafter. As if hell was built for
rabbits! Well, the Martians will just be a godsend to these. Nice roomy cages,
fattening food, careful breeding, no worry. After a week or so chasing about
the fields and lands on empty stomachs, they’ll come and be caught
cheerful. They’ll be quite glad after a bit. They’ll wonder what
people did before there were Martians to take care of them. And the bar
loafers, and mashers, and singers—I can imagine them. I can imagine
them,” he said, with a sort of sombre gratification.
“There’ll be any amount of sentiment and religion loose among them.
There’s hundreds of things I saw with my eyes that I’ve only begun
to see clearly these last few days. There’s lots will take things as they
are—fat and stupid; and lots will be worried by a sort of feeling that
it’s all wrong, and that they ought to be doing something. Now whenever
things are so that a lot of people feel they ought to be doing something, the
weak, and those who go weak with a lot of complicated thinking, always make for
a sort of do-nothing religion, very pious and superior, and submit to
persecution and the will of the Lord. Very likely you’ve seen the same
thing. It’s energy in a gale of funk, and turned clean inside out. These
cages will be full of psalms and hymns and piety. And those of a less simple
sort will work in a bit of—what is it?—eroticism.”</p>
<p>He paused.</p>
<p>“Very likely these Martians will make pets of some of them; train them to
do tricks—who knows?—get sentimental over the pet boy who grew up
and had to be killed. And some, maybe, they will train to hunt us.”</p>
<p>“No,” I cried, “that’s impossible! No human
being——”</p>
<p>“What’s the good of going on with such lies?” said the
artilleryman. “There’s men who’d do it cheerful. What
nonsense to pretend there isn’t!”</p>
<p>And I succumbed to his conviction.</p>
<p>“If they come after me,” he said; “Lord, if they come after
me!” and subsided into a grim meditation.</p>
<p>I sat contemplating these things. I could find nothing to bring against this
man’s reasoning. In the days before the invasion no one would have
questioned my intellectual superiority to his—I, a professed and
recognised writer on philosophical themes, and he, a common soldier; and yet he
had already formulated a situation that I had scarcely realised.</p>
<p>“What are you doing?” I said presently. “What plans have you
made?”</p>
<p>He hesitated.</p>
<p>“Well, it’s like this,” he said. “What have we to do?
We have to invent a sort of life where men can live and breed, and be
sufficiently secure to bring the children up. Yes—wait a bit, and
I’ll make it clearer what I think ought to be done. The tame ones will go
like all tame beasts; in a few generations they’ll be big, beautiful,
rich-blooded, stupid—rubbish! The risk is that we who keep wild will go
savage—degenerate into a sort of big, savage rat. . . . You see, how I
mean to live is underground. I’ve been thinking about the drains. Of
course those who don’t know drains think horrible things; but under this
London are miles and miles—hundreds of miles—and a few days rain
and London empty will leave them sweet and clean. The main drains are big
enough and airy enough for anyone. Then there’s cellars, vaults, stores,
from which bolting passages may be made to the drains. And the railway tunnels
and subways. Eh? You begin to see? And we form a band—able-bodied,
clean-minded men. We’re not going to pick up any rubbish that drifts in.
Weaklings go out again.”</p>
<p>“As you meant me to go?”</p>
<p>“Well—I parleyed, didn’t I?”</p>
<p>“We won’t quarrel about that. Go on.”</p>
<p>“Those who stop obey orders. Able-bodied, clean-minded women we want
also—mothers and teachers. No lackadaisical ladies—no blasted
rolling eyes. We can’t have any weak or silly. Life is real again, and
the useless and cumbersome and mischievous have to die. They ought to die. They
ought to be willing to die. It’s a sort of disloyalty, after all, to live
and taint the race. And they can’t be happy. Moreover, dying’s none
so dreadful; it’s the funking makes it bad. And in all those places we
shall gather. Our district will be London. And we may even be able to keep a
watch, and run about in the open when the Martians keep away. Play cricket,
perhaps. That’s how we shall save the race. Eh? It’s a possible
thing? But saving the race is nothing in itself. As I say, that’s only
being rats. It’s saving our knowledge and adding to it is the thing.
There men like you come in. There’s books, there’s models. We must
make great safe places down deep, and get all the books we can; not novels and
poetry swipes, but ideas, science books. That’s where men like you come
in. We must go to the British Museum and pick all those books through.
Especially we must keep up our science—learn more. We must watch these
Martians. Some of us must go as spies. When it’s all working, perhaps I
will. Get caught, I mean. And the great thing is, we must leave the Martians
alone. We mustn’t even steal. If we get in their way, we clear out. We
must show them we mean no harm. Yes, I know. But they’re intelligent
things, and they won’t hunt us down if they have all they want, and think
we’re just harmless vermin.”</p>
<p>The artilleryman paused and laid a brown hand upon my arm.</p>
<p>“After all, it may not be so much we may have to learn before—Just
imagine this: four or five of their fighting machines suddenly starting
off—Heat-Rays right and left, and not a Martian in ’em. Not a
Martian in ’em, but men—men who have learned the way how. It may be
in my time, even—those men. Fancy having one of them lovely things, with
its Heat-Ray wide and free! Fancy having it in control! What would it matter if
you smashed to smithereens at the end of the run, after a bust like that? I
reckon the Martians’ll open their beautiful eyes! Can’t you see
them, man? Can’t you see them hurrying, hurrying—puffing and
blowing and hooting to their other mechanical affairs? Something out of gear in
every case. And swish, bang, rattle, swish! Just as they are fumbling over it,
<i>swish</i> comes the Heat-Ray, and, behold! man has come back to his
own.”</p>
<p>For a while the imaginative daring of the artilleryman, and the tone of
assurance and courage he assumed, completely dominated my mind. I believed
unhesitatingly both in his forecast of human destiny and in the practicability
of his astonishing scheme, and the reader who thinks me susceptible and foolish
must contrast his position, reading steadily with all his thoughts about his
subject, and mine, crouching fearfully in the bushes and listening, distracted
by apprehension. We talked in this manner through the early morning time, and
later crept out of the bushes, and, after scanning the sky for Martians,
hurried precipitately to the house on Putney Hill where he had made his lair.
It was the coal cellar of the place, and when I saw the work he had spent a
week upon—it was a burrow scarcely ten yards long, which he designed to
reach to the main drain on Putney Hill—I had my first inkling of the gulf
between his dreams and his powers. Such a hole I could have dug in a day. But I
believed in him sufficiently to work with him all that morning until past
midday at his digging. We had a garden barrow and shot the earth we removed
against the kitchen range. We refreshed ourselves with a tin of mock-turtle
soup and wine from the neighbouring pantry. I found a curious relief from the
aching strangeness of the world in this steady labour. As we worked, I turned
his project over in my mind, and presently objections and doubts began to
arise; but I worked there all the morning, so glad was I to find myself with a
purpose again. After working an hour I began to speculate on the distance one
had to go before the cloaca was reached, the chances we had of missing it
altogether. My immediate trouble was why we should dig this long tunnel, when
it was possible to get into the drain at once down one of the manholes, and
work back to the house. It seemed to me, too, that the house was inconveniently
chosen, and required a needless length of tunnel. And just as I was beginning
to face these things, the artilleryman stopped digging, and looked at me.</p>
<p>“We’re working well,” he said. He put down his spade.
“Let us knock off a bit” he said. “I think it’s time we
reconnoitred from the roof of the house.”</p>
<p>I was for going on, and after a little hesitation he resumed his spade; and
then suddenly I was struck by a thought. I stopped, and so did he at once.</p>
<p>“Why were you walking about the common,” I said, “instead of
being here?”</p>
<p>“Taking the air,” he said. “I was coming back. It’s
safer by night.”</p>
<p>“But the work?”</p>
<p>“Oh, one can’t always work,” he said, and in a flash I saw
the man plain. He hesitated, holding his spade. “We ought to reconnoitre
now,” he said, “because if any come near they may hear the spades
and drop upon us unawares.”</p>
<p>I was no longer disposed to object. We went together to the roof and stood on a
ladder peeping out of the roof door. No Martians were to be seen, and we
ventured out on the tiles, and slipped down under shelter of the parapet.</p>
<p>From this position a shrubbery hid the greater portion of Putney, but we could
see the river below, a bubbly mass of red weed, and the low parts of Lambeth
flooded and red. The red creeper swarmed up the trees about the old palace, and
their branches stretched gaunt and dead, and set with shrivelled leaves, from
amid its clusters. It was strange how entirely dependent both these things were
upon flowing water for their propagation. About us neither had gained a
footing; laburnums, pink mays, snowballs, and trees of arbor-vitae, rose out of
laurels and hydrangeas, green and brilliant into the sunlight. Beyond
Kensington dense smoke was rising, and that and a blue haze hid the northward
hills.</p>
<p>The artilleryman began to tell me of the sort of people who still remained in
London.</p>
<p>“One night last week,” he said, “some fools got the electric
light in order, and there was all Regent Street and the Circus ablaze, crowded
with painted and ragged drunkards, men and women, dancing and shouting till
dawn. A man who was there told me. And as the day came they became aware of a
fighting-machine standing near by the Langham and looking down at them. Heaven
knows how long he had been there. It must have given some of them a nasty turn.
He came down the road towards them, and picked up nearly a hundred too drunk or
frightened to run away.”</p>
<p>Grotesque gleam of a time no history will ever fully describe!</p>
<p>From that, in answer to my questions, he came round to his grandiose plans
again. He grew enthusiastic. He talked so eloquently of the possibility of
capturing a fighting-machine that I more than half believed in him again. But
now that I was beginning to understand something of his quality, I could divine
the stress he laid on doing nothing precipitately. And I noted that now there
was no question that he personally was to capture and fight the great machine.</p>
<p>After a time we went down to the cellar. Neither of us seemed disposed to
resume digging, and when he suggested a meal, I was nothing loath. He became
suddenly very generous, and when we had eaten he went away and returned with
some excellent cigars. We lit these, and his optimism glowed. He was inclined
to regard my coming as a great occasion.</p>
<p>“There’s some champagne in the cellar,” he said.</p>
<p>“We can dig better on this Thames-side burgundy,” said I.</p>
<p>“No,” said he; “I am host today. Champagne! Great God!
We’ve a heavy enough task before us! Let us take a rest and gather
strength while we may. Look at these blistered hands!”</p>
<p>And pursuant to this idea of a holiday, he insisted upon playing cards after we
had eaten. He taught me euchre, and after dividing London between us, I taking
the northern side and he the southern, we played for parish points. Grotesque
and foolish as this will seem to the sober reader, it is absolutely true, and
what is more remarkable, I found the card game and several others we played
extremely interesting.</p>
<p>Strange mind of man! that, with our species upon the edge of extermination or
appalling degradation, with no clear prospect before us but the chance of a
horrible death, we could sit following the chance of this painted pasteboard,
and playing the “joker” with vivid delight. Afterwards he taught me
poker, and I beat him at three tough chess games. When dark came we decided to
take the risk, and lit a lamp.</p>
<p>After an interminable string of games, we supped, and the artilleryman finished
the champagne. We went on smoking the cigars. He was no longer the energetic
regenerator of his species I had encountered in the morning. He was still
optimistic, but it was a less kinetic, a more thoughtful optimism. I remember
he wound up with my health, proposed in a speech of small variety and
considerable intermittence. I took a cigar, and went upstairs to look at the
lights of which he had spoken that blazed so greenly along the Highgate hills.</p>
<p>At first I stared unintelligently across the London valley. The northern hills
were shrouded in darkness; the fires near Kensington glowed redly, and now and
then an orange-red tongue of flame flashed up and vanished in the deep blue
night. All the rest of London was black. Then, nearer, I perceived a strange
light, a pale, violet-purple fluorescent glow, quivering under the night
breeze. For a space I could not understand it, and then I knew that it must be
the red weed from which this faint irradiation proceeded. With that realisation
my dormant sense of wonder, my sense of the proportion of things, awoke again.
I glanced from that to Mars, red and clear, glowing high in the west, and then
gazed long and earnestly at the darkness of Hampstead and Highgate.</p>
<p>I remained a very long time upon the roof, wondering at the grotesque changes
of the day. I recalled my mental states from the midnight prayer to the foolish
card-playing. I had a violent revulsion of feeling. I remember I flung away the
cigar with a certain wasteful symbolism. My folly came to me with glaring
exaggeration. I seemed a traitor to my wife and to my kind; I was filled with
remorse. I resolved to leave this strange undisciplined dreamer of great things
to his drink and gluttony, and to go on into London. There, it seemed to me, I
had the best chance of learning what the Martians and my fellowmen were doing.
I was still upon the roof when the late moon rose.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap25"></SPAN>VIII.<br/> DEAD LONDON.</h2>
<p>After I had parted from the artilleryman, I went down the hill, and by the High
Street across the bridge to Fulham. The red weed was tumultuous at that time,
and nearly choked the bridge roadway; but its fronds were already whitened in
patches by the spreading disease that presently removed it so swiftly.</p>
<p>At the corner of the lane that runs to Putney Bridge station I found a man
lying. He was as black as a sweep with the black dust, alive, but helplessly
and speechlessly drunk. I could get nothing from him but curses and furious
lunges at my head. I think I should have stayed by him but for the brutal
expression of his face.</p>
<p>There was black dust along the roadway from the bridge onwards, and it grew
thicker in Fulham. The streets were horribly quiet. I got food—sour,
hard, and mouldy, but quite eatable—in a baker’s shop here. Some
way towards Walham Green the streets became clear of powder, and I passed a
white terrace of houses on fire; the noise of the burning was an absolute
relief. Going on towards Brompton, the streets were quiet again.</p>
<p>Here I came once more upon the black powder in the streets and upon dead
bodies. I saw altogether about a dozen in the length of the Fulham Road. They
had been dead many days, so that I hurried quickly past them. The black powder
covered them over, and softened their outlines. One or two had been disturbed
by dogs.</p>
<p>Where there was no black powder, it was curiously like a Sunday in the City,
with the closed shops, the houses locked up and the blinds drawn, the
desertion, and the stillness. In some places plunderers had been at work, but
rarely at other than the provision and wine shops. A jeweller’s window
had been broken open in one place, but apparently the thief had been disturbed,
and a number of gold chains and a watch lay scattered on the pavement. I did
not trouble to touch them. Farther on was a tattered woman in a heap on a
doorstep; the hand that hung over her knee was gashed and bled down her rusty
brown dress, and a smashed magnum of champagne formed a pool across the
pavement. She seemed asleep, but she was dead.</p>
<p>The farther I penetrated into London, the profounder grew the stillness. But it
was not so much the stillness of death—it was the stillness of suspense,
of expectation. At any time the destruction that had already singed the
northwestern borders of the metropolis, and had annihilated Ealing and Kilburn,
might strike among these houses and leave them smoking ruins. It was a city
condemned and derelict. . . .</p>
<p>In South Kensington the streets were clear of dead and of black powder. It was
near South Kensington that I first heard the howling. It crept almost
imperceptibly upon my senses. It was a sobbing alternation of two notes,
“Ulla, ulla, ulla, ulla,” keeping on perpetually. When I passed
streets that ran northward it grew in volume, and houses and buildings seemed
to deaden and cut it off again. It came in a full tide down Exhibition Road. I
stopped, staring towards Kensington Gardens, wondering at this strange, remote
wailing. It was as if that mighty desert of houses had found a voice for its
fear and solitude.</p>
<p>“Ulla, ulla, ulla, ulla,” wailed that superhuman note—great
waves of sound sweeping down the broad, sunlit roadway, between the tall
buildings on each side. I turned northwards, marvelling, towards the iron gates
of Hyde Park. I had half a mind to break into the Natural History Museum and
find my way up to the summits of the towers, in order to see across the park.
But I decided to keep to the ground, where quick hiding was possible, and so
went on up the Exhibition Road. All the large mansions on each side of the road
were empty and still, and my footsteps echoed against the sides of the houses.
At the top, near the park gate, I came upon a strange sight—a bus
overturned, and the skeleton of a horse picked clean. I puzzled over this for a
time, and then went on to the bridge over the Serpentine. The voice grew
stronger and stronger, though I could see nothing above the housetops on the
north side of the park, save a haze of smoke to the northwest.</p>
<p>“Ulla, ulla, ulla, ulla,” cried the voice, coming, as it seemed to
me, from the district about Regent’s Park. The desolating cry worked upon
my mind. The mood that had sustained me passed. The wailing took possession of
me. I found I was intensely weary, footsore, and now again hungry and thirsty.</p>
<p>It was already past noon. Why was I wandering alone in this city of the dead?
Why was I alone when all London was lying in state, and in its black shroud? I
felt intolerably lonely. My mind ran on old friends that I had forgotten for
years. I thought of the poisons in the chemists’ shops, of the liquors
the wine merchants stored; I recalled the two sodden creatures of despair, who
so far as I knew, shared the city with myself. . . .</p>
<p>I came into Oxford Street by the Marble Arch, and here again were black powder
and several bodies, and an evil, ominous smell from the gratings of the cellars
of some of the houses. I grew very thirsty after the heat of my long walk. With
infinite trouble I managed to break into a public-house and get food and drink.
I was weary after eating, and went into the parlour behind the bar, and slept
on a black horsehair sofa I found there.</p>
<p>I awoke to find that dismal howling still in my ears, “Ulla, ulla, ulla,
ulla.” It was now dusk, and after I had routed out some biscuits and a
cheese in the bar—there was a meat safe, but it contained nothing but
maggots—I wandered on through the silent residential squares to Baker
Street—Portman Square is the only one I can name—and so came out at
last upon Regent’s Park. And as I emerged from the top of Baker Street, I
saw far away over the trees in the clearness of the sunset the hood of the
Martian giant from which this howling proceeded. I was not terrified. I came
upon him as if it were a matter of course. I watched him for some time, but he
did not move. He appeared to be standing and yelling, for no reason that I
could discover.</p>
<p>I tried to formulate a plan of action. That perpetual sound of “Ulla,
ulla, ulla, ulla,” confused my mind. Perhaps I was too tired to be very
fearful. Certainly I was more curious to know the reason of this monotonous
crying than afraid. I turned back away from the park and struck into Park Road,
intending to skirt the park, went along under the shelter of the terraces, and
got a view of this stationary, howling Martian from the direction of St.
John’s Wood. A couple of hundred yards out of Baker Street I heard a
yelping chorus, and saw, first a dog with a piece of putrescent red meat in his
jaws coming headlong towards me, and then a pack of starving mongrels in
pursuit of him. He made a wide curve to avoid me, as though he feared I might
prove a fresh competitor. As the yelping died away down the silent road, the
wailing sound of “Ulla, ulla, ulla, ulla,” reasserted itself.</p>
<p>I came upon the wrecked handling-machine halfway to St. John’s Wood
station. At first I thought a house had fallen across the road. It was only as
I clambered among the ruins that I saw, with a start, this mechanical Samson
lying, with its tentacles bent and smashed and twisted, among the ruins it had
made. The forepart was shattered. It seemed as if it had driven blindly
straight at the house, and had been overwhelmed in its overthrow. It seemed to
me then that this might have happened by a handling-machine escaping from the
guidance of its Martian. I could not clamber among the ruins to see it, and the
twilight was now so far advanced that the blood with which its seat was
smeared, and the gnawed gristle of the Martian that the dogs had left, were
invisible to me.</p>
<p>Wondering still more at all that I had seen, I pushed on towards Primrose Hill.
Far away, through a gap in the trees, I saw a second Martian, as motionless as
the first, standing in the park towards the Zoological Gardens, and silent. A
little beyond the ruins about the smashed handling-machine I came upon the red
weed again, and found the Regent’s Canal, a spongy mass of dark-red
vegetation.</p>
<p>As I crossed the bridge, the sound of “Ulla, ulla, ulla, ulla,”
ceased. It was, as it were, cut off. The silence came like a thunderclap.</p>
<p>The dusky houses about me stood faint and tall and dim; the trees towards the
park were growing black. All about me the red weed clambered among the ruins,
writhing to get above me in the dimness. Night, the mother of fear and mystery,
was coming upon me. But while that voice sounded the solitude, the desolation,
had been endurable; by virtue of it London had still seemed alive, and the
sense of life about me had upheld me. Then suddenly a change, the passing of
something—I knew not what—and then a stillness that could be felt.
Nothing but this gaunt quiet.</p>
<p>London about me gazed at me spectrally. The windows in the white houses were
like the eye sockets of skulls. About me my imagination found a thousand
noiseless enemies moving. Terror seized me, a horror of my temerity. In front
of me the road became pitchy black as though it was tarred, and I saw a
contorted shape lying across the pathway. I could not bring myself to go on. I
turned down St. John’s Wood Road, and ran headlong from this unendurable
stillness towards Kilburn. I hid from the night and the silence, until long
after midnight, in a cabmen’s shelter in Harrow Road. But before the dawn
my courage returned, and while the stars were still in the sky I turned once
more towards Regent’s Park. I missed my way among the streets, and
presently saw down a long avenue, in the half-light of the early dawn, the
curve of Primrose Hill. On the summit, towering up to the fading stars, was a
third Martian, erect and motionless like the others.</p>
<p>An insane resolve possessed me. I would die and end it. And I would save myself
even the trouble of killing myself. I marched on recklessly towards this Titan,
and then, as I drew nearer and the light grew, I saw that a multitude of black
birds was circling and clustering about the hood. At that my heart gave a
bound, and I began running along the road.</p>
<p>I hurried through the red weed that choked St. Edmund’s Terrace (I waded
breast-high across a torrent of water that was rushing down from the waterworks
towards the Albert Road), and emerged upon the grass before the rising of the
sun. Great mounds had been heaped about the crest of the hill, making a huge
redoubt of it—it was the final and largest place the Martians had
made—and from behind these heaps there rose a thin smoke against the sky.
Against the sky line an eager dog ran and disappeared. The thought that had
flashed into my mind grew real, grew credible. I felt no fear, only a wild,
trembling exultation, as I ran up the hill towards the motionless monster. Out
of the hood hung lank shreds of brown, at which the hungry birds pecked and
tore.</p>
<p>In another moment I had scrambled up the earthen rampart and stood upon its
crest, and the interior of the redoubt was below me. A mighty space it was,
with gigantic machines here and there within it, huge mounds of material and
strange shelter places. And scattered about it, some in their overturned
war-machines, some in the now rigid handling-machines, and a dozen of them
stark and silent and laid in a row, were the
Martians—<i>dead</i>!—slain by the putrefactive and disease
bacteria against which their systems were unprepared; slain as the red weed was
being slain; slain, after all man’s devices had failed, by the humblest
things that God, in his wisdom, has put upon this earth.</p>
<p>For so it had come about, as indeed I and many men might have foreseen had not
terror and disaster blinded our minds. These germs of disease have taken toll
of humanity since the beginning of things—taken toll of our prehuman
ancestors since life began here. But by virtue of this natural selection of our
kind we have developed resisting power; to no germs do we succumb without a
struggle, and to many—those that cause putrefaction in dead matter, for
instance—our living frames are altogether immune. But there are no
bacteria in Mars, and directly these invaders arrived, directly they drank and
fed, our microscopic allies began to work their overthrow. Already when I
watched them they were irrevocably doomed, dying and rotting even as they went
to and fro. It was inevitable. By the toll of a billion deaths man has bought
his birthright of the earth, and it is his against all comers; it would still
be his were the Martians ten times as mighty as they are. For neither do men
live nor die in vain.</p>
<p>Here and there they were scattered, nearly fifty altogether, in that great gulf
they had made, overtaken by a death that must have seemed to them as
incomprehensible as any death could be. To me also at that time this death was
incomprehensible. All I knew was that these things that had been alive and so
terrible to men were dead. For a moment I believed that the destruction of
Sennacherib had been repeated, that God had repented, that the Angel of Death
had slain them in the night.</p>
<p>I stood staring into the pit, and my heart lightened gloriously, even as the
rising sun struck the world to fire about me with his rays. The pit was still
in darkness; the mighty engines, so great and wonderful in their power and
complexity, so unearthly in their tortuous forms, rose weird and vague and
strange out of the shadows towards the light. A multitude of dogs, I could
hear, fought over the bodies that lay darkly in the depth of the pit, far below
me. Across the pit on its farther lip, flat and vast and strange, lay the great
flying-machine with which they had been experimenting upon our denser
atmosphere when decay and death arrested them. Death had come not a day too
soon. At the sound of a cawing overhead I looked up at the huge
fighting-machine that would fight no more for ever, at the tattered red shreds
of flesh that dripped down upon the overturned seats on the summit of Primrose
Hill.</p>
<p>I turned and looked down the slope of the hill to where, enhaloed now in birds,
stood those other two Martians that I had seen overnight, just as death had
overtaken them. The one had died, even as it had been crying to its companions;
perhaps it was the last to die, and its voice had gone on perpetually until the
force of its machinery was exhausted. They glittered now, harmless tripod
towers of shining metal, in the brightness of the rising sun.</p>
<p>All about the pit, and saved as by a miracle from everlasting destruction,
stretched the great Mother of Cities. Those who have only seen London veiled in
her sombre robes of smoke can scarcely imagine the naked clearness and beauty
of the silent wilderness of houses.</p>
<p>Eastward, over the blackened ruins of the Albert Terrace and the splintered
spire of the church, the sun blazed dazzling in a clear sky, and here and there
some facet in the great wilderness of roofs caught the light and glared with a
white intensity.</p>
<p>Northward were Kilburn and Hampsted, blue and crowded with houses; westward the
great city was dimmed; and southward, beyond the Martians, the green waves of
Regent’s Park, the Langham Hotel, the dome of the Albert Hall, the
Imperial Institute, and the giant mansions of the Brompton Road came out clear
and little in the sunrise, the jagged ruins of Westminster rising hazily
beyond. Far away and blue were the Surrey hills, and the towers of the Crystal
Palace glittered like two silver rods. The dome of St. Paul’s was dark
against the sunrise, and injured, I saw for the first time, by a huge gaping
cavity on its western side.</p>
<p>And as I looked at this wide expanse of houses and factories and churches,
silent and abandoned; as I thought of the multitudinous hopes and efforts, the
innumerable hosts of lives that had gone to build this human reef, and of the
swift and ruthless destruction that had hung over it all; when I realised that
the shadow had been rolled back, and that men might still live in the streets,
and this dear vast dead city of mine be once more alive and powerful, I felt a
wave of emotion that was near akin to tears.</p>
<p>The torment was over. Even that day the healing would begin. The survivors of
the people scattered over the country—leaderless, lawless, foodless, like
sheep without a shepherd—the thousands who had fled by sea, would begin
to return; the pulse of life, growing stronger and stronger, would beat again
in the empty streets and pour across the vacant squares. Whatever destruction
was done, the hand of the destroyer was stayed. All the gaunt wrecks, the
blackened skeletons of houses that stared so dismally at the sunlit grass of
the hill, would presently be echoing with the hammers of the restorers and
ringing with the tapping of their trowels. At the thought I extended my hands
towards the sky and began thanking God. In a year, thought I—in a year. .
. .</p>
<p>With overwhelming force came the thought of myself, of my wife, and the old
life of hope and tender helpfulness that had ceased for ever.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap26"></SPAN>IX.<br/> WRECKAGE.</h2>
<p>And now comes the strangest thing in my story. Yet, perhaps, it is not
altogether strange. I remember, clearly and coldly and vividly, all that I did
that day until the time that I stood weeping and praising God upon the summit
of Primrose Hill. And then I forget.</p>
<p>Of the next three days I know nothing. I have learned since that, so far from
my being the first discoverer of the Martian overthrow, several such wanderers
as myself had already discovered this on the previous night. One man—the
first—had gone to St. Martin’s-le-Grand, and, while I sheltered in
the cabmen’s hut, had contrived to telegraph to Paris. Thence the joyful
news had flashed all over the world; a thousand cities, chilled by ghastly
apprehensions, suddenly flashed into frantic illuminations; they knew of it in
Dublin, Edinburgh, Manchester, Birmingham, at the time when I stood upon the
verge of the pit. Already men, weeping with joy, as I have heard, shouting and
staying their work to shake hands and shout, were making up trains, even as
near as Crewe, to descend upon London. The church bells that had ceased a
fortnight since suddenly caught the news, until all England was bell-ringing.
Men on cycles, lean-faced, unkempt, scorched along every country lane shouting
of unhoped deliverance, shouting to gaunt, staring figures of despair. And for
the food! Across the Channel, across the Irish Sea, across the Atlantic, corn,
bread, and meat were tearing to our relief. All the shipping in the world
seemed going Londonward in those days. But of all this I have no memory. I
drifted—a demented man. I found myself in a house of kindly people, who
had found me on the third day wandering, weeping, and raving through the
streets of St. John’s Wood. They have told me since that I was singing
some insane doggerel about “The Last Man Left Alive! Hurrah! The Last Man
Left Alive!” Troubled as they were with their own affairs, these people,
whose name, much as I would like to express my gratitude to them, I may not
even give here, nevertheless cumbered themselves with me, sheltered me, and
protected me from myself. Apparently they had learned something of my story
from me during the days of my lapse.</p>
<p>Very gently, when my mind was assured again, did they break to me what they had
learned of the fate of Leatherhead. Two days after I was imprisoned it had been
destroyed, with every soul in it, by a Martian. He had swept it out of
existence, as it seemed, without any provocation, as a boy might crush an ant
hill, in the mere wantonness of power.</p>
<p>I was a lonely man, and they were very kind to me. I was a lonely man and a sad
one, and they bore with me. I remained with them four days after my recovery.
All that time I felt a vague, a growing craving to look once more on whatever
remained of the little life that seemed so happy and bright in my past. It was
a mere hopeless desire to feast upon my misery. They dissuaded me. They did all
they could to divert me from this morbidity. But at last I could resist the
impulse no longer, and, promising faithfully to return to them, and parting, as
I will confess, from these four-day friends with tears, I went out again into
the streets that had lately been so dark and strange and empty.</p>
<p>Already they were busy with returning people; in places even there were shops
open, and I saw a drinking fountain running water.</p>
<p>I remember how mockingly bright the day seemed as I went back on my melancholy
pilgrimage to the little house at Woking, how busy the streets and vivid the
moving life about me. So many people were abroad everywhere, busied in a
thousand activities, that it seemed incredible that any great proportion of the
population could have been slain. But then I noticed how yellow were the skins
of the people I met, how shaggy the hair of the men, how large and bright their
eyes, and that every other man still wore his dirty rags. Their faces seemed
all with one of two expressions—a leaping exultation and energy or a grim
resolution. Save for the expression of the faces, London seemed a city of
tramps. The vestries were indiscriminately distributing bread sent us by the
French government. The ribs of the few horses showed dismally. Haggard special
constables with white badges stood at the corners of every street. I saw little
of the mischief wrought by the Martians until I reached Wellington Street, and
there I saw the red weed clambering over the buttresses of Waterloo Bridge.</p>
<p>At the corner of the bridge, too, I saw one of the common contrasts of that
grotesque time—a sheet of paper flaunting against a thicket of the red
weed, transfixed by a stick that kept it in place. It was the placard of the
first newspaper to resume publication—the <i>Daily Mail</i>. I bought a
copy for a blackened shilling I found in my pocket. Most of it was in blank,
but the solitary compositor who did the thing had amused himself by making a
grotesque scheme of advertisement stereo on the back page. The matter he
printed was emotional; the news organisation had not as yet found its way back.
I learned nothing fresh except that already in one week the examination of the
Martian mechanisms had yielded astonishing results. Among other things, the
article assured me what I did not believe at the time, that the “Secret
of Flying,” was discovered. At Waterloo I found the free trains that were
taking people to their homes. The first rush was already over. There were few
people in the train, and I was in no mood for casual conversation. I got a
compartment to myself, and sat with folded arms, looking greyly at the sunlit
devastation that flowed past the windows. And just outside the terminus the
train jolted over temporary rails, and on either side of the railway the houses
were blackened ruins. To Clapham Junction the face of London was grimy with
powder of the Black Smoke, in spite of two days of thunderstorms and rain, and
at Clapham Junction the line had been wrecked again; there were hundreds of
out-of-work clerks and shopmen working side by side with the customary navvies,
and we were jolted over a hasty relaying.</p>
<p>All down the line from there the aspect of the country was gaunt and
unfamiliar; Wimbledon particularly had suffered. Walton, by virtue of its
unburned pine woods, seemed the least hurt of any place along the line. The
Wandle, the Mole, every little stream, was a heaped mass of red weed, in
appearance between butcher’s meat and pickled cabbage. The Surrey pine
woods were too dry, however, for the festoons of the red climber. Beyond
Wimbledon, within sight of the line, in certain nursery grounds, were the
heaped masses of earth about the sixth cylinder. A number of people were
standing about it, and some sappers were busy in the midst of it. Over it
flaunted a Union Jack, flapping cheerfully in the morning breeze. The nursery
grounds were everywhere crimson with the weed, a wide expanse of livid colour
cut with purple shadows, and very painful to the eye. One’s gaze went
with infinite relief from the scorched greys and sullen reds of the foreground
to the blue-green softness of the eastward hills.</p>
<p>The line on the London side of Woking station was still undergoing repair, so I
descended at Byfleet station and took the road to Maybury, past the place where
I and the artilleryman had talked to the hussars, and on by the spot where the
Martian had appeared to me in the thunderstorm. Here, moved by curiosity, I
turned aside to find, among a tangle of red fronds, the warped and broken dog
cart with the whitened bones of the horse scattered and gnawed. For a time I
stood regarding these vestiges. . . .</p>
<p>Then I returned through the pine wood, neck-high with red weed here and there,
to find the landlord of the Spotted Dog had already found burial, and so came
home past the College Arms. A man standing at an open cottage door greeted me
by name as I passed.</p>
<p>I looked at my house with a quick flash of hope that faded immediately. The
door had been forced; it was unfast and was opening slowly as I approached.</p>
<p>It slammed again. The curtains of my study fluttered out of the open window
from which I and the artilleryman had watched the dawn. No one had closed it
since. The smashed bushes were just as I had left them nearly four weeks ago. I
stumbled into the hall, and the house felt empty. The stair carpet was ruffled
and discoloured where I had crouched, soaked to the skin from the thunderstorm
the night of the catastrophe. Our muddy footsteps I saw still went up the
stairs.</p>
<p>I followed them to my study, and found lying on my writing-table still, with
the selenite paper weight upon it, the sheet of work I had left on the
afternoon of the opening of the cylinder. For a space I stood reading over my
abandoned arguments. It was a paper on the probable development of Moral Ideas
with the development of the civilising process; and the last sentence was the
opening of a prophecy: “In about two hundred years,” I had written,
“we may expect——” The sentence ended abruptly. I
remembered my inability to fix my mind that morning, scarcely a month gone by,
and how I had broken off to get my <i>Daily Chronicle</i> from the newsboy. I
remembered how I went down to the garden gate as he came along, and how I had
listened to his odd story of “Men from Mars.”</p>
<p>I came down and went into the dining room. There were the mutton and the bread,
both far gone now in decay, and a beer bottle overturned, just as I and the
artilleryman had left them. My home was desolate. I perceived the folly of the
faint hope I had cherished so long. And then a strange thing occurred.
“It is no use,” said a voice. “The house is deserted. No one
has been here these ten days. Do not stay here to torment yourself. No one
escaped but you.”</p>
<p>I was startled. Had I spoken my thought aloud? I turned, and the French window
was open behind me. I made a step to it, and stood looking out.</p>
<p>And there, amazed and afraid, even as I stood amazed and afraid, were my cousin
and my wife—my wife white and tearless. She gave a faint cry.</p>
<p>“I came,” she said. “I knew—knew——”</p>
<p>She put her hand to her throat—swayed. I made a step forward, and caught
her in my arms.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap27"></SPAN>X.<br/> THE EPILOGUE.</h2>
<p>I cannot but regret, now that I am concluding my story, how little I am able to
contribute to the discussion of the many debatable questions which are still
unsettled. In one respect I shall certainly provoke criticism. My particular
province is speculative philosophy. My knowledge of comparative physiology is
confined to a book or two, but it seems to me that Carver’s suggestions
as to the reason of the rapid death of the Martians is so probable as to be
regarded almost as a proven conclusion. I have assumed that in the body of my
narrative.</p>
<p>At any rate, in all the bodies of the Martians that were examined after the
war, no bacteria except those already known as terrestrial species were found.
That they did not bury any of their dead, and the reckless slaughter they
perpetrated, point also to an entire ignorance of the putrefactive process. But
probable as this seems, it is by no means a proven conclusion.</p>
<p>Neither is the composition of the Black Smoke known, which the Martians used
with such deadly effect, and the generator of the Heat-Rays remains a puzzle.
The terrible disasters at the Ealing and South Kensington laboratories have
disinclined analysts for further investigations upon the latter. Spectrum
analysis of the black powder points unmistakably to the presence of an unknown
element with a brilliant group of three lines in the green, and it is possible
that it combines with argon to form a compound which acts at once with deadly
effect upon some constituent in the blood. But such unproven speculations will
scarcely be of interest to the general reader, to whom this story is addressed.
None of the brown scum that drifted down the Thames after the destruction of
Shepperton was examined at the time, and now none is forthcoming.</p>
<p>The results of an anatomical examination of the Martians, so far as the
prowling dogs had left such an examination possible, I have already given. But
everyone is familiar with the magnificent and almost complete specimen in
spirits at the Natural History Museum, and the countless drawings that have
been made from it; and beyond that the interest of their physiology and
structure is purely scientific.</p>
<p>A question of graver and universal interest is the possibility of another
attack from the Martians. I do not think that nearly enough attention is being
given to this aspect of the matter. At present the planet Mars is in
conjunction, but with every return to opposition I, for one, anticipate a
renewal of their adventure. In any case, we should be prepared. It seems to me
that it should be possible to define the position of the gun from which the
shots are discharged, to keep a sustained watch upon this part of the planet,
and to anticipate the arrival of the next attack.</p>
<p>In that case the cylinder might be destroyed with dynamite or artillery before
it was sufficiently cool for the Martians to emerge, or they might be butchered
by means of guns so soon as the screw opened. It seems to me that they have
lost a vast advantage in the failure of their first surprise. Possibly they see
it in the same light.</p>
<p>Lessing has advanced excellent reasons for supposing that the Martians have
actually succeeded in effecting a landing on the planet Venus. Seven months ago
now, Venus and Mars were in alignment with the sun; that is to say, Mars was in
opposition from the point of view of an observer on Venus. Subsequently a
peculiar luminous and sinuous marking appeared on the unillumined half of the
inner planet, and almost simultaneously a faint dark mark of a similar sinuous
character was detected upon a photograph of the Martian disk. One needs to see
the drawings of these appearances in order to appreciate fully their remarkable
resemblance in character.</p>
<p>At any rate, whether we expect another invasion or not, our views of the human
future must be greatly modified by these events. We have learned now that we
cannot regard this planet as being fenced in and a secure abiding place for
Man; we can never anticipate the unseen good or evil that may come upon us
suddenly out of space. It may be that in the larger design of the universe this
invasion from Mars is not without its ultimate benefit for men; it has robbed
us of that serene confidence in the future which is the most fruitful source of
decadence, the gifts to human science it has brought are enormous, and it has
done much to promote the conception of the commonweal of mankind. It may be
that across the immensity of space the Martians have watched the fate of these
pioneers of theirs and learned their lesson, and that on the planet Venus they
have found a securer settlement. Be that as it may, for many years yet there
will certainly be no relaxation of the eager scrutiny of the Martian disk, and
those fiery darts of the sky, the shooting stars, will bring with them as they
fall an unavoidable apprehension to all the sons of men.</p>
<p>The broadening of men’s views that has resulted can scarcely be
exaggerated. Before the cylinder fell there was a general persuasion that
through all the deep of space no life existed beyond the petty surface of our
minute sphere. Now we see further. If the Martians can reach Venus, there is no
reason to suppose that the thing is impossible for men, and when the slow
cooling of the sun makes this earth uninhabitable, as at last it must do, it
may be that the thread of life that has begun here will have streamed out and
caught our sister planet within its toils.</p>
<p>Dim and wonderful is the vision I have conjured up in my mind of life spreading
slowly from this little seed bed of the solar system throughout the inanimate
vastness of sidereal space. But that is a remote dream. It may be, on the other
hand, that the destruction of the Martians is only a reprieve. To them, and not
to us, perhaps, is the future ordained.</p>
<p>I must confess the stress and danger of the time have left an abiding sense of
doubt and insecurity in my mind. I sit in my study writing by lamplight, and
suddenly I see again the healing valley below set with writhing flames, and
feel the house behind and about me empty and desolate. I go out into the
Byfleet Road, and vehicles pass me, a butcher boy in a cart, a cabful of
visitors, a workman on a bicycle, children going to school, and suddenly they
become vague and unreal, and I hurry again with the artilleryman through the
hot, brooding silence. Of a night I see the black powder darkening the silent
streets, and the contorted bodies shrouded in that layer; they rise upon me
tattered and dog-bitten. They gibber and grow fiercer, paler, uglier, mad
distortions of humanity at last, and I wake, cold and wretched, in the darkness
of the night.</p>
<p>I go to London and see the busy multitudes in Fleet Street and the Strand, and
it comes across my mind that they are but the ghosts of the past, haunting the
streets that I have seen silent and wretched, going to and fro, phantasms in a
dead city, the mockery of life in a galvanised body. And strange, too, it is to
stand on Primrose Hill, as I did but a day before writing this last chapter, to
see the great province of houses, dim and blue through the haze of the smoke
and mist, vanishing at last into the vague lower sky, to see the people walking
to and fro among the flower beds on the hill, to see the sight-seers about the
Martian machine that stands there still, to hear the tumult of playing
children, and to recall the time when I saw it all bright and clear-cut, hard
and silent, under the dawn of that last great day. . . .</p>
<p>And strangest of all is it to hold my wife’s hand again, and to think
that I have counted her, and that she has counted me, among the dead.</p>
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