MindMap Gallery The War of the Worlds - H. G. Wells
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Edited at 2020-09-24 09:48:23The War of the Worlds
Characters
The Narrator
A man who tells the story of the Martian invasion. The narrator describes himself as a “professed and recognized writer on philosophical themes.”
The Artilleryman
A soldier who operates one of the large guns used to fight the Martians.
The Curate
A religious man who has spent his life working for the church.
The Narrator’s Brother
A medical student who lives in London, and whose story the narrator provides as a way of showing readers the impact of the Martians throughout England.
The Narrator’s Wife
The unnamed woman who is married to the narrator. After Ogilvy is killed by the Martians, the narrator stumbles home, panicked and exhausted.
Ogilvy
An astronomer who first tells the narrator about the strange explosions seen on Mars in the days leading up to the alien invasion.
Mrs. Elphinstone
A woman the narrator’s brother meets while fleeing London. When the narrator’s brother first encounters her, Mrs. Elphinstone and her sister-in-law, Miss Elphinstone, are being attacked and robbed by three men.
Henderson
A friend of Ogilvy and a journalist by profession, he is tasked with informing the general public of the first wave of Martian invaders and the immediate threat that they represent.
Landlord
The Landlord character is written in a similar fashion to other characters in that he, too, remains unnamed throughout the novel and is a quasi-character that interacts with the plot and the main characters based on how he affects the Narrator’s actions and choices.
The Innkeeper
The landlord of an inn and bar called the Spotted Dog.
Analysis And Interpretation
Plot Summary
The War of the Worlds chronicles the events of a Martian invasion as experienced by an unidentified male narrator and his brother. The story begins a few years before the invasion. During the astronomical opposition of 1894, when Mars is closer to Earth than usual, several observatories spot flashes of light on the surface of Mars.
The narrator witnesses one of these flashes through a telescope at an observatory in Ottershaw, Surrey, England. He immediately alerts his companion, Ogilvy, “the well-known astronomer.” Ogilvy quickly dismisses the idea that the flashes are an indication of life on Mars. He assures the narrator that “[t]he chances against anything manlike on Mars are a million to one.” The flashes continue unexplained for several nights.
Early one morning, a “falling star” appears over England. It crashes on Horsell Common, a large expanse of public land near the narrator’s home in Maybury. When the narrator visits the crash site, he finds a crowd of about 20 people gathered around a large cylindrical object embedded in a sand pit.
The object is made of metal, and it appears to be hollow. The narrator immediately suspects that the object came from Mars. After observing it for some time, the narrator returns to his home in Maybury. By the time he next visits the crash site, news of the landing has spread, and the number of spectators has increased significantly. The narrator’s second visit is far more eventful than his first: the cylinder opens, and he gets his first glimpse of the Martians:
A big grayish, 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…. The whole creature heaved and pulsated convulsively. A lank tentacular appendage gripped the edge of the cylinder; another swayed in the air.
After a second Martian makes its way out of the cylinder, the narrator runs away in terror. While he hides in the woods, a small group of men (including Ogilvy) approach the cylinder with a white flag. As they near the Martians, there is a great flash of light, and the men carrying the flag are instantly incinerated. Several more flashes follow, causing the spectators to scatter. The narrator escapes back to his house, where he tells his wife what he has seen.
Shortly thereafter, military forces arrive on Horsell Common, and a second cylinder lands near the first. Fighting soon breaks out between the soldiers and the Martians. The following evening, after it becomes apparent that the soldiers are no match for the Martians and their “Heat Rays,” the narrator resolves to take his wife east to Leatherhead, where he believes they will be safe.
Using a horse-drawn cart rented from an oblivious innkeeper, the narrator successfully transports his wife (and a few of his belongings) to Leatherhead. Late that night, he leaves to return the cart. As he approaches Maybury, he encounters a terrifying sight—a “monstrous tripod, higher than many houses, striding over the young pine-trees, and smashing them aside in its career.”
Stupefied by the sight of the Martian “fighting-machine,” the narrator crashes the cart, thereby breaking the horse’s neck. The narrator just barely escapes detection by the Martians. Against all odds, he manages to make it back to his house. While sheltering there, he encounters a fleeing artilleryman.
Cut off from his wife by a cylinder between Maybury and Leatherhead, the narrator decides to travel with the artilleryman. However, they are quickly separated. After a terrifying encounter with the Martians on the River Thames, the narrator finds an abandoned boat, which he uses to paddle toward London. Overcome by “fever and faintness,” he stops at Walton, where he meets the curate who will become his companion for the next few weeks.
At this point, the narrative changes focus, and the narrator begins to tell the story of the invasion as it was experienced by his younger brother, a medical student (also unnamed) in London. According to the narrator, news of the Martian invasion was slow to spread in London. Two days after the initial attack, most Londoners were either unaware of or unconcerned about the danger presented by the Martians.
Only after the Martians march upon London do the inhabitants begin to panic. The Martians release a poisonous “Black Smoke” over the city, forcing civilians to evacuate en masse. While attempting to flee to Essex, the narrator’s brother catches a group of men in the act of robbing two women. The brother bravely intervenes and saves the women.
They allow him to join them in their carriage, and the three of them set out for the southeastern coast of England. After a series of unfortunate events (their pony is taken away as food by the Committee of Public Supply), the party reaches the coast, where they combine their money and buy passage to Ostend, Belgium, on a steamer. As the steamer pulls away from the shore, the brother watches a spectacular fight between a warship—the torpedo ram HMS Thunder Child—and three Martian fighting-machines.
Meanwhile, the narrator and the curate plunder houses in search of food. At Sheen, they find a well-stocked house and decide to stop for a quick rest. They are almost immediately disturbed by “a blinding glare of vivid green light.” Suddenly, a cylinder strikes the ground outside, and the narrator is knocked unconscious.
When he comes to, the curate tells him not to move, because the Martians are outside. The narrator and the curate decide to stay in the ruins of the house. After about a week of watching the Martians and rationing what little food they have left, their relationship begins to deteriorate.
The curate eventually becomes hysterical, and the narrator is forced to knock him unconscious. The scuffle is overheard by a Martian, who—much to the narrator’s horror—stretches a tentacle into the ruins. The tentacle drags the curate’s unconscious body out of the house and nearly grabs the narrator too.
The narrator hides alone in the ruins for six days. When he finally emerges from the house, he discovers that the Martians have abandoned the cylinder. After observing the wreckage around the house, the stunned narrator begins walking toward London. On the way, he once again encounters the artilleryman, who fills him in on the events of the past two weeks.
According to the artilleryman, the Martians have destroyed London and set up a camp at the north end of the city. He claims it is “all over.” Humankind is simply “beat.” The artilleryman eagerly tells the narrator about his plan to live beneath London and build a community of like-minded survivors in the sewers. The narrator considers joining the artilleryman, but he ultimately decides against it. He leaves, continuing on his journey toward London.
The path to London is marked by mass destruction. As he walks, the narrator sees piles upon piles of bodies. In the distance, he hears a Martian chanting “ulla” and follows the sound of its voice. Ready to end it all, the narrator approaches a fighting-machine—only to discover that the Martian inside is already dead. As it turns out, all of the Martians are dead, “slain by the putrefactive and disease bacteria against which their systems were unprepared.”
The narrator is overwhelmed, and he suffers a three-day nervous breakdown. After a kind family nurses him back to health, he makes his way back to Maybury. At his home, he discovers that his wife has also survived. In the epilogue, the narrator considers the significance of the Martian invasion and warns future generations to prepare themselves.
About the Book
Author
H. G. Wells
21 September 1866 – 13 August 1946
English writer
Detail a catastrophic conflict between humans and extraterrestrial “Martians.”
Ffirst serialised in 1897 by Pearson's Magazine in the UK and by Cosmopolitan magazine in the US.
First-person narrative of both an unnamed protagonist in Surrey and of his younger brother in London as southern England is invaded by Martians
Gutenberg eBook
science fiction