| BOOK ONE: THE COMING OF THE MARTIANS
CHAPTER 1: THE EVE OF THE WAR
 (continued)   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? |