The
War
of
the
Worlds
by
H.
G.
Wells
‘But
who
shall
dwell
in
these
worlds
if
they
be
inhabited?
.
.
.
Are
we
or
they
Lords
of
the
World?
.
.
.
And
how
are
all
things
made
for
man?’
KEPLER
(quoted
in
The
Anatomy
of
Melancholy)
BOOK
ONE
THE
COMING
OF
THE
MARTIANS
I.
THE
EVE
OF
THE
WAR.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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?
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.
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
Nature
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.
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.”
A
singularly
appropriate
phrase
it
proved.
Yet
the
next
day
there
was
nothing
of
this
in
the
papers
except
a
little
note
in
the
Daily
Telegraph,
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“The
chances
against
anything
manlike
on
Mars
are
a
million
to
one,”
he
said.
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.
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
Punch,
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.
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.
II.
THE
FALLING
STAR.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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!
“Good
heavens!”
said
Ogilvy.
“There’s
a
man
in
it—men
in
it!
Half
roasted
to
death!
Trying
to
escape!”
At
once,
with
a
quick
mental
leap,
he
linked
the
Thing
with
the
flash
upon
Mars.
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.
“Henderson,”
he
called,
“you
saw
that
shooting
star
last
night?”
“Well?”
said
Henderson.
“It’s
out
on
Horsell
Common
now.”
“Good
Lord!”
said
Henderson.
“Fallen
meteorite!
That’s
good.”
“But
it’s
something
more
than
a
meteorite.
It’s
a
cylinder—an
artificial
cylinder,
man!
And
there’s
something
inside.”
Henderson
stood
up
with
his
spade
in
his
hand.
“What’s
that?”
he
said.
He
was
deaf
in
one
ear.
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.
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.
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.
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
Daily
Chronicle.
I
was
naturally
startled,
and
lost
no
time
in
going
out
and
across
the
Ottershaw
bridge
to
the
sand-pits.
III.
ON
HORSELL
COMMON.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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:
“A
MESSAGE
RECEIVED
FROM
MARS.”
“REMARKABLE
STORY
FROM
WOKING,”
and
so
forth.
In
addition,
Ogilvy’s
wire
to
the
Astronomical
Exchange
had
roused
every
observatory
in
the
three
kingdoms.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
IV.
THE
CYLINDER
OPENS.
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:
“Keep
back!
Keep
back!”
A
boy
came
running
towards
me.
“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.”
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.
“He’s
fallen
in
the
pit!”
cried
some
one.
“Keep
back!”
said
several.
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.
“I
say!”
said
Ogilvy;
“help
keep
these
idiots
back.
We
don’t
know
what’s
in
the
confounded
thing,
you
know!”
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
V.
THE
HEAT-RAY.
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.
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?
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.
“What
ugly
brutes!”
he
said.
“Good
God!
What
ugly
brutes!”
He
repeated
this
over
and
over
again.
“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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Then,
by
the
light
of
their
own
destruction,
I
saw
them
staggering
and
falling,
and
their
supporters
turning
to
run.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
With
an
effort
I
turned
and
began
a
stumbling
run
through
the
heather.
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.
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.
VI.
THE
HEAT-RAY
IN
THE
CHOBHAM
ROAD.
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.
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.
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.
.
.
.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“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.
VII.
HOW
I
REACHED
HOME.
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.
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.
I
must
have
remained
there
some
time.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“What
news
from
the
common?”
said
I.
There
were
two
men
and
a
woman
at
the
gate.
“Eh?”
said
one
of
the
men,
turning.
“What
news
from
the
common?”
I
said.
“Ain’t
yer
just
been
there?”
asked
the
men.
“People
seem
fair
silly
about
the
common,”
said
the
woman
over
the
gate.
“What’s
it
all
abart?”
“Haven’t
you
heard
of
the
men
from
Mars?”
said
I;
“the
creatures
from
Mars?”
“Quite
enough,”
said
the
woman
over
the
gate.
“Thenks”;
and
all
three
of
them
laughed.
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.
“You’ll
hear
more
yet,”
I
said,
and
went
on
to
my
home.
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.
“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!”
“Don’t,
dear!”
said
my
wife,
knitting
her
brows
and
putting
her
hand
on
mine.
“Poor
Ogilvy!”
I
said.
“To
think
he
may
be
lying
dead
there!”
My
wife
at
least
did
not
find
my
experience
incredible.
When
I
saw
how
deadly
white
her
face
was,
I
ceased
abruptly.
“They
may
come
here,”
she
said
again
and
again.
I
pressed
her
to
take
wine,
and
tried
to
reassure
her.
“They
can
scarcely
move,”
I
said.
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
The
Times
and
the
Daily
Telegraph,
for
instance,
insisted
on
it
the
next
morning,
and
both
overlooked,
just
as
I
did,
two
obvious
modifying
influences.
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.
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.
“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.”
“A
shell
in
the
pit,”
said
I,
“if
the
worst
comes
to
the
worst,
will
kill
them
all.”
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.
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.”
I
did
not
know
it,
but
that
was
the
last
civilised
dinner
I
was
to
eat
for
very
many
strange
and
terrible
days.
VIII.
FRIDAY
NIGHT.
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.
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
a
special
edition.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
IX.
THE
FIGHTING
BEGINS.
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.
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.
“They
aren’t
to
be
killed,”
said
the
milkman,
“if
that
can
possibly
be
avoided.”
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.
“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.”
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.
“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.”
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.
“Crawl
up
under
cover
and
rush
’em,
say
I,”
said
one.
“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.”
“Blow
yer
trenches!
You
always
want
trenches;
you
ought
to
ha’
been
born
a
rabbit
Snippy.”
“Ain’t
they
got
any
necks,
then?”
said
a
third,
abruptly—a
little,
contemplative,
dark
man,
smoking
a
pipe.
I
repeated
my
description.
“Octopuses,”
said
he,
“that’s
what
I
calls
’em.
Talk
about
fishers
of
men—fighters
of
fish
it
is
this
time!”
“It
ain’t
no
murder
killing
beasts
like
that,”
said
the
first
speaker.
“Why
not
shell
the
darned
things
strite
off
and
finish
’em?”
said
the
little
dark
man.
“You
carn
tell
what
they
might
do.”
“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.”
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“We
can’t
possibly
stay
here,”
I
said;
and
as
I
spoke
the
firing
reopened
for
a
moment
upon
the
common.
“But
where
are
we
to
go?”
said
my
wife
in
terror.
I
thought
perplexed.
Then
I
remembered
her
cousins
at
Leatherhead.
“Leatherhead!”
I
shouted
above
the
sudden
noise.
She
looked
away
from
me
downhill.
The
people
were
coming
out
of
their
houses,
astonished.
“How
are
we
to
get
to
Leatherhead?”
she
said.
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.
“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.
“I
must
have
a
pound,”
said
the
landlord,
“and
I’ve
no
one
to
drive
it.”
“I’ll
give
you
two,”
said
I,
over
the
stranger’s
shoulder.
“What
for?”
“And
I’ll
bring
it
back
by
midnight,”
I
said.
“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?”
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:
“What
news?”
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.
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.
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.
X.
IN
THE
STORM.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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!
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
So
much
I
saw
then,
all
vaguely
for
the
flickering
of
the
lightning,
in
blinding
highlights
and
dense
black
shadows.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
I
crouched
at
the
foot
of
the
staircase
with
my
back
to
the
wall,
shivering
violently.
XI.
AT
THE
WINDOW.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“Hist!”
said
I,
in
a
whisper.
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.
“Who’s
there?”
he
said,
also
whispering,
standing
under
the
window
and
peering
up.
“Where
are
you
going?”
I
asked.
“God
knows.”
“Are
you
trying
to
hide?”
“That’s
it.”
“Come
into
the
house,”
I
said.
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.
“My
God!”
he
said,
as
I
drew
him
in.
“What
has
happened?”
I
asked.
“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.
He
followed
me,
almost
mechanically,
into
the
dining
room.
“Take
some
whisky,”
I
said,
pouring
out
a
stiff
dose.
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.
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.
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.
“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!”
“Wiped
out!”
he
said.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Beyond
were
the
pillars
of
fire
about
Chobham.
They
became
pillars
of
bloodshot
smoke
at
the
first
touch
of
day.
XII.
WHAT
I
SAW
OF
THE
DESTRUCTION
OF
WEYBRIDGE
AND
SHEPPERTON.
As
the
dawn
grew
brighter
we
withdrew
from
the
window
from
which
we
had
watched
the
Martians,
and
went
very
quietly
downstairs.
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.
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.
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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“You
are
the
first
men
I’ve
seen
coming
this
way
this
morning,”
said
the
lieutenant.
“What’s
brewing?”
His
voice
and
face
were
eager.
The
men
behind
him
stared
curiously.
The
artilleryman
jumped
down
the
bank
into
the
road
and
saluted.
“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.”
“What
the
dickens
are
they
like?”
asked
the
lieutenant.
“Giants
in
armour,
sir.
Hundred
feet
high.
Three
legs
and
a
body
like
’luminium,
with
a
mighty
great
head
in
a
hood,
sir.”
“Get
out!”
said
the
lieutenant.
“What
confounded
nonsense!”
“You’ll
see,
sir.
They
carry
a
kind
of
box,
sir,
that
shoots
fire
and
strikes
you
dead.”
“What
d’ye
mean—a
gun?”
“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.
“It’s
perfectly
true,”
I
said.
“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?”
“I
do,”
I
said;
and
he
turned
his
horse
southward
again.
“Half
a
mile,
you
say?”
said
he.
“At
most,”
I
answered,
and
pointed
over
the
treetops
southward.
He
thanked
me
and
rode
on,
and
we
saw
them
no
more.
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.
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.
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.
“That’s
good!”
said
I.
“They
will
get
one
fair
shot,
at
any
rate.”
The
artilleryman
hesitated
at
the
gate.
“I
shall
go
on,”
he
said.
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.
“It’s
bows
and
arrows
against
the
lightning,
anyhow,”
said
the
artilleryman.
“They
’aven’t
seen
that
fire-beam
yet.”
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.
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.
“Do
you
know
what’s
over
there?”
I
said,
pointing
at
the
pine
tops
that
hid
the
Martians.
“Eh?”
said
he,
turning.
“I
was
explainin’
these
is
vallyble.”
“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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“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.
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.
“The
sojers’ll
stop
’em,”
said
a
woman
beside
me,
doubtfully.
A
haziness
rose
over
the
treetops.
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.
“Here
they
are!”
shouted
a
man
in
a
blue
jersey.
“Yonder!
D’yer
see
them?
Yonder!”
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.
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.
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!
“Get
under
water!”
I
shouted,
unheeded.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“Hit!”
shouted
I,
with
something
between
a
scream
and
a
cheer.
I
heard
answering
shouts
from
the
people
in
the
water
about
me.
I
could
have
leaped
out
of
the
water
with
that
momentary
exultation.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
XIII.
HOW
I
FELL
IN
WITH
THE
CURATE.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
I
sat
up,
and
at
the
rustle
of
my
motion
he
looked
at
me
quickly.
“Have
you
any
water?”
I
asked
abruptly.
He
shook
his
head.
“You
have
been
asking
for
water
for
the
last
hour,”
he
said.
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.
“What
does
it
mean?”
he
said.
“What
do
these
things
mean?”
I
stared
at
him
and
made
no
answer.
He
extended
a
thin
white
hand
and
spoke
in
almost
a
complaining
tone.
“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?”
“What
are
we?”
I
answered,
clearing
my
throat.
He
gripped
his
knees
and
turned
to
look
at
me
again.
For
half
a
minute,
perhaps,
he
stared
silently.
“I
was
walking
through
the
roads
to
clear
my
brain,”
he
said.
“And
suddenly—fire,
earthquake,
death!”
He
relapsed
into
silence,
with
his
chin
now
sunken
almost
to
his
knees.
Presently
he
began
waving
his
hand.
“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?”
Another
pause,
and
he
broke
out
again
like
one
demented.
“The
smoke
of
her
burning
goeth
up
for
ever
and
ever!”
he
shouted.
His
eyes
flamed,
and
he
pointed
a
lean
finger
in
the
direction
of
Weybridge.
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.
“Are
we
far
from
Sunbury?”
I
said,
in
a
matter-of-fact
tone.
“What
are
we
to
do?”
he
asked.
“Are
these
creatures
everywhere?
Has
the
earth
been
given
over
to
them?”
“Are
we
far
from
Sunbury?”
“Only
this
morning
I
officiated
at
early
celebration——”
“Things
have
changed,”
I
said,
quietly.
“You
must
keep
your
head.
There
is
still
hope.”
“Hope!”
“Yes.
Plentiful
hope—for
all
this
destruction!”
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.
“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!”
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.
“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.”
For
a
time
he
sat
in
blank
silence.
“But
how
can
we
escape?”
he
asked,
suddenly.
“They
are
invulnerable,
they
are
pitiless.”
“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.”
“Killed!”
he
said,
staring
about
him.
“How
can
God’s
ministers
be
killed?”
“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.”
“What
is
that
flicker
in
the
sky?”
he
asked
abruptly.
I
told
him
it
was
the
heliograph
signalling—that
it
was
the
sign
of
human
help
and
effort
in
the
sky.
“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.”
And
even
as
I
spoke
he
sprang
to
his
feet
and
stopped
me
by
a
gesture.
“Listen!”
he
said.
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.
“We
had
better
follow
this
path,”
I
said,
“northward.”
XIV.
IN
LONDON.
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.
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.
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
St.
James’s
Gazette,
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
Sunday
Sun
put
it,
and
a
clever
and
remarkably
prompt
“handbook”
article
in
the
Referee
compared
the
affair
to
a
menagerie
suddenly
let
loose
in
a
village.
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.
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
Referee.
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.
“There’s
fighting
going
on
about
Weybridge”
was
the
extent
of
their
information.
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.
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.
“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?”
My
brother
could
not
tell
him.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“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.”
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“What
the
devil
is
it?”
he
asked.
“A
fire?
What
a
devil
of
a
row!”
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.
“What
the
devil
is
it
all
about?”
said
my
brother’s
fellow
lodger.
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:
“London
in
danger
of
suffocation!
The
Kingston
and
Richmond
defences
forced!
Fearful
massacres
in
the
Thames
Valley!”
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.
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.
And
from
this
paper
my
brother
read
that
catastrophic
dispatch
of
the
Commander-in-Chief:
“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.”
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
en
masse
northward.
“Black
Smoke!”
the
voices
cried.
“Fire!”
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.
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.
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.
XV.
WHAT
HAD
HAPPENED
IN
SURREY.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
The
two
halted,
the
nearer
to
us
standing
and
facing
Sunbury,
the
remoter
being
a
grey
indistinctness
towards
the
evening
star,
away
towards
Staines.
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.
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.
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?
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.
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.
“What
has
happened?”
said
the
curate,
standing
up
beside
me.
“Heaven
knows!”
said
I.
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.
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.
Moved
by
a
sudden
thought,
I
looked
northward,
and
there
I
perceived
a
third
of
these
cloudy
black
kopjes
had
risen.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
XVI.
THE
EXODUS
FROM
LONDON.
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.
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.
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.
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
ploughed
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“Take
this!”
said
the
slender
lady,
and
she
gave
my
brother
her
revolver.
“Go
back
to
the
chaise,”
said
my
brother,
wiping
the
blood
from
his
split
lip.
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.
The
robbers
had
evidently
had
enough
of
it.
When
my
brother
looked
again
they
were
retreating.
“I’ll
sit
here,”
said
my
brother,
“if
I
may”;
and
he
got
upon
the
empty
front
seat.
The
lady
looked
over
her
shoulder.
“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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“We
have
money,”
said
the
slender
woman,
and
hesitated.
Her
eyes
met
my
brother’s,
and
her
hesitation
ended.
“So
have
I,”
said
my
brother.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“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.
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.
“Good
heavens!”
cried
Mrs.
Elphinstone.
“What
is
this
you
are
driving
us
into?”
My
brother
stopped.
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.
“Way!”
my
brother
heard
voices
crying.
“Make
way!”
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.
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.
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.
“Go
on!
Go
on!”
cried
the
voices.
“Way!
Way!”
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.
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.
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.
“Push
on!”
was
the
cry.
“Push
on!
They
are
coming!”
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.
There
were
cabs,
carriages,
shop-carts,
waggons,
beyond
counting;
a
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.
“Clear
the
way!”
cried
the
voices.
“Clear
the
way!”
“Eter-nity!
Eter-nity!”
came
echoing
down
the
road.
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.
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:
“Way!
Way!
The
Martians
are
coming!”
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.
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.
“I
can’t
go
on!
I
can’t
go
on!”
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.
“Ellen!”
shrieked
a
woman
in
the
crowd,
with
tears
in
her
voice—“Ellen!”
And
the
child
suddenly
darted
away
from
my
brother,
crying
“Mother!”
“They
are
coming,”
said
a
man
on
horseback,
riding
past
along
the
lane.
“Out
of
the
way,
there!”
bawled
a
coachman,
towering
high;
and
my
brother
saw
a
closed
carriage
turning
into
the
lane.
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.
One
of
the
men
came
running
to
my
brother.
“Where
is
there
any
water?”
he
said.
“He
is
dying
fast,
and
very
thirsty.
It
is
Lord
Garrick.”
“Lord
Garrick!”
said
my
brother;
“the
Chief
Justice?”
“The
water?”
he
said.
“There
may
be
a
tap,”
said
my
brother,
“in
some
of
the
houses.
We
have
no
water.
I
dare
not
leave
my
people.”
The
man
pushed
against
the
crowd
towards
the
gate
of
the
corner
house.
“Go
on!”
said
the
people,
thrusting
at
him.
“They
are
coming!
Go
on!”
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.
“Way!”
cried
the
men
all
about
him.
“Make
way!”
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.
“Stop!”
screamed
my
brother,
and
pushing
a
woman
out
of
his
way,
tried
to
clutch
the
bit
of
the
horse.
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.
“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!”
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.
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.
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.
“We
must
go
that
way,”
he
said,
and
led
the
pony
round
again.
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.
“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.”
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.
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.
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.
XVII.
THE
“THUNDER
CHILD”.
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.
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
blotted.
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.
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.
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.
When,
an
hour
later,
a
Martian
appeared
beyond
the
Clock
Tower
and
waded
down
the
river,
nothing
but
wreckage
floated
above
Limehouse.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
Thunder
Child.
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.
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....
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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,
Thunder
Child,
steaming
headlong,
coming
to
the
rescue
of
the
threatened
shipping.
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
Thunder
Child
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
Thunder
Child
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.
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.
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.
“Two!”
yelled
the
captain.
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.
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
Thunder
Child
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.
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.
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.
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.
BOOK
TWO
THE
EARTH
UNDER
THE
MARTIANS.
I.
UNDER
FOOT.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“We
are
safe
here,”
he
repeated;
“safe
here.”
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“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.
For
some
time
I
could
not
recollect
what
had
happened.
Then
things
came
to
me
slowly.
A
bruise
on
my
temple
asserted
itself.
“Are
you
better?”
asked
the
curate
in
a
whisper.
At
last
I
answered
him.
I
sat
up.
“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
they
are
outside.”
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.
“That!”
said
the
curate,
when
presently
it
happened
again.
“Yes,”
I
said.
“But
what
is
it?”
“A
Martian!”
said
the
curate.
I
listened
again.
“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.
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.
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.
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.
Abruptly
the
right
interpretation
dawned
upon
my
mind.
“The
fifth
cylinder,”
I
whispered,
“the
fifth
shot
from
Mars,
has
struck
this
house
and
buried
us
under
the
ruins!”
For
a
time
the
curate
was
silent,
and
then
he
whispered:
“God
have
mercy
upon
us!”
I
heard
him
presently
whimpering
to
himself.
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.
.
.
.
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.
II.
WHAT
WE
SAW
FROM
THE
RUINED
HOUSE.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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