The War of the Worlds B1343

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B1343
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The War of the Worlds
H.G. Wells
About the author
H.G. Wells was born in England in 1866. After a number
of unsuccessful years working in a shop, he left work to
study biology in 1883. He later became a teacher, but
he was not suited to this work either and so decided
to become a full-time writer in 1893. His first novel,
The Time Machine, was published in 1895. In it, Wells
criticizes British society and warns that human progress is
not inevitable. His next novels, The Island of Dr Moreau
(1896), The Invisible Man (1897), and The War of the
Worlds (1898), all question the relationship between man
and science and are regarded as science fiction classics.
Wells used his position as a well known and popular
author to try to change society for the better. After the
First World War (1914–18) Wells became increasingly
involved in politics at an international level. He worked
for the League of Nations – an organization whose main
objective was to prevent another war on the scale of the
last. He met with important leaders, including Lenin, and
worked in the Labour party in Britain. His high profile
political career continued through the next decades until
his death in 1946. Wells lived through the Second World
War in his house in central London, refusing to let the war
force him from his home.
Summary
The War of the Worlds is one of the most important science
fiction classics of all time. It tells the story of Martians
arriving on Earth with a plan to destroy human life and
make the planet their own. The story is reported directly
by a survivor of the Martian war – a writer, whose name
we never learn. One summer night, at the end of the
nineteenth century, a strange cylinder falls to Earth near
the English town of Woking. Few people are interested
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at first, but then the end of the cylinder unscrews and
a strange, grey creature – a Martian – emerges. Within
minutes the Martians are attacking people with rays of
heat, which destroy everything in their path. When the
Martians start moving towards London and the news
spreads, the population panics. Within days there are six
million refugees fighting to escape London. Thousands
of people are being killed every day and the Martians are
only becoming stronger.
Just when things seem most desperate, the writer discovers
that the Martians are being killed by Earth’s germs.
Against the odds he is reunited with his wife and left to
reflect upon the huge influence that the war has had upon
humankind.
Chapters 1–2: Although the people of Earth do not know
it, they are being watched by Mars. Mars, a planet that
is older than Earth, is also growing colder with age, and
the Martians want to come to Earth to live. The Martians
fire missiles at Earth as they begin the first stage of their
attack. The writer of the story says one night he went to
the house of Ogilvy, an astronomer, and saw a flash on
Mars through a telescope. It was a second missile that the
Martians had fired. A few nights later Ogilvy sees what he
thinks is a meteorite falling on Horsell Common and he
goes out to investigate. He discovers an enormous cylinder
in a pit, and he realizes that it is hollow and that there may
be someone inside. Ogilvy tells a journalist and soon a
great crowd of people comes to see the strange object.
Chapters 3–4: The cylinder opens and the Martians
appear. Their tentacles give them the appearance of
snakes, and their round, dark bodies are similar to the
bodies of bears. The crowd is afraid and runs away but
later that night people come back to look again. Suddenly,
an invisible ray from a round object above the pit sets
men and trees on fire. The writer runs away. In the pit
the Martians are making machines equipped with these
Heat-Rays. A second cylinder falls nearby in Woking. The
Army arrives and begins to shoot field guns against the
two cylinders. The writer, his wife and servant, leave their
house and go to the village of Leatherhead. However, most
people in England do not realize the danger and continue
to live as usual.
Chapters 5–6: After leaving his wife and servant in
Leatherhead the writer returns to his house. As he comes
to his village the writer sees a flash of light, it is the third
Martian cylinder that has landed on Earth. Then he
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B1343
PENGUIN READERS
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The War of the Worlds
sees two enormous tripods that are walking toward the
third cylinder. The writer meets a soldier who tells him
that the Army field gun team had been destroyed by the
Heat-Ray from the Martians’ tripod. The writer and the
soldier decide to go north to London to escape from
the Martians. They arrive at the River Thames where an
excited crowd is trying to cross the water. Suddenly several
Martian tripods appear. The writer escapes in a boat
and meets a curate, who is confused by the destruction.
Together they continue toward London.
Chapters 7–8: The writer’s younger brother lives in
London. During the weekend, reports about the Martians
have come slowly to the city. The writer’s brother is very
worried about his brother and his family. On Monday
morning there is panic in the streets. People say that the
Martians are coming with a Black Smoke that poisons
and kills. The writer sees the Martians using the Black
Smoke as they approach London. The Martians use the
Black Smoke when they cannot see who they are fighting;
otherwise they use the Heat-Ray.
Chapters 9–10: The government tells the people of
London to leave the city. Six million people leave the
capital. Many go to the east coast of England to take a
boat to the Continent. The writer’s brother meets two
women whom he helps and they get on a steamboat. The
Thunder Child, an English warship, attacks three Martian
tripods that appear on the coast. The Martians use Black
Smoke and the Heat-Ray against the warship, but the
Thunder Child knocks down two tripods. The warship
explodes as the steamboat with the writer and the two
women on board escapes.
Chapters 11–12: The writer and the curate hide in a
house to escape the Black Smoke. They leave the house
when it is safe and then they see Martians picking people
up and putting them in a large metal box. The writer
and the curate hide from the Martians in another house.
A fifth cylinder from Mars falls upon the house next
to where they are and creates a huge pit in the ground.
The writer watches the Martians as they work in the pit.
The increased gravity on Earth makes it difficult for the
Martians to move their, round bodies. The writer believes
that the Martians can exchange thoughts. He argues with
the curate as they continue to hide in the house, which
was almost destroyed by the explosion of the fifth cylinder
when it struck the house next to them. He discovers
that the Martians are killing human beings and drinking
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their blood. The curate goes mad and the writer kills him
during a fight. A Martian hears the fight, takes away the
body of the curate and all the food in the house but does
not find the writer. After many days without eating, the
writer leaves the house. Outside there are many houses in
ruins and dead bodies of human beings.
Chapters 13–15: The writer meets the soldier he had
met at his house earlier. The soldier tells the writer that
the Martians are building flying machines and that they
will defeat the people of Earth. The soldier says that some
people will fight the Martians and others will not. The
soldier believes that there are two kinds of human beings,
the strong and the weak, and that only the strong will
survive. The soldier shows the writer his plans to fight the
Martians, but the writer realizes that the soldier is just a
dreamer, and not willing to do the hard work necessary
to defeat the Martians. The writer leaves and goes to
London. In the city many houses are destroyed and there
are a lot of dead people, but there are also dead Martians.
The Martians have died of germs, which do not exist on
Mars. The writer is taken care of by kind people and when
he is well he returns to his house, where he finds that his
wife is still alive.
Background and themes
The War of the Worlds is set in and around London at the
end of the nineteenth century. At this time, Britain was
the most powerful country in the world. It had made great
advances in trade and science in the Victorian era and
people felt confident and optimistic about the future.
Scientific progress: In The War of the Worlds, Wells
warns the reader against such complacency. He urges that
advances in scientific understanding should not be taken
for granted, and predicts the negative effect upon society
that technological advances might have if they are not
used responsibly or intelligently.
Future scientific inventions: When The War of the
Worlds was written, wars were fought between men on the
ground. But Wells depicts the horrors of a war fought with
giant fighting machines, flying machines and chemical
weapons. Less than twenty years later these horrors became
reality when Europe was ripped apart by the First World
War (1914–18). Sometimes called the ‘first modern war’,
the First World War used tanks, aeroplanes and chemical
weapons with disastrous effects on both sides.
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The War of the Worlds
Fight for survival: As well as the science of war, Wells
considers the effects of such large-scale destruction upon
society. When men are forced to fight for survival, society
breaks down. The book’s description of the panic that
sweeps through London, as people steal and fight to
save their own lives, is frightening because it is realistic.
But amongst the chaos, Wells portrays individual acts of
kindness and bravery. The book tells us that human beings
have the potential to be good if they try.
Discussion activities
Before reading
1 Discuss: The War of the Worlds is one of the most
famous science fiction stories of all time. Ask the class
to give you names of other famous science fiction
stories from literature, film or television. Students
then work in pairs to write a short description
of a famous science fiction story – but without
mentioning the title or main character. Each pair
then reads their description out loud and the rest of
the class tries to guess the title of the story.
2 Research: Using available books and the Internet
students look for the latest information regarding
the possibility of intelligent life in the universe and,
more specifically, the possibility of life on Mars. Each
student writes down the most interesting piece of
information discovered and reads it to the class.
Introduction
Before reading
3 Discuss: Ask students: What kind of books do you like
reading? Have you read science fiction before? What
authors have you read? Do you think that H.G. Wells,
who wrote this novel more than a hundred years ago,
will be as interesting as a modern writer?
4 In 1938, Orson Welles’s radio broadcast of The War
of the Worlds had an unexpected effect on its listeners.
Ask the students if they know about it. If not, can
they guess what happened? After you have solicited
the students’ ideas, ask them to read the Introduction
(pages v–vii). Did anyone guess correctly? Could the
same thing happen today? Why/why not?
5 Discuss: Ask students to read the first two sentences
in italics at the beginning of the Introduction. Then
say to students: All the Martian cylinders land in
England. Why do you think that the Martians chose that
country? What country would they choose today?
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Chapters 1–2
After reading
6 Discuss: Ask students to look up the word
‘complacency’ in their dictionaries. Then ask students:
Why do you think that people in England did not believe
in threats from other planets at the end of the nineteenth
century? Do people still feel as safe today as when the
novel was written?
7 Role play: In pairs. Students take the roles of the
writer and Ogilvy as they look through the telescope
at Mars and see a flash on the planet. Students are
encouraged to see more than is reported in the story.
8 Write: Students write a newspaper paragraph with
information about the arrival of the cylinder on
Horsell Common. Who, what, where, when, are
questions that need to be answered. Ask students to
think of a headline that will get readers’ attention.
Students read out their headlines to the class.
Chapters 3–4
Before reading
9 Predict with artwork: Have students read the title to
Chapter 3, The Cylinder Opens. Ask them to imagine
what the Martians will look like and draw a picture.
Students will then show their pictures to the class and
name the various parts of the body. Students will vote
for the picture they think is most ‘Martian.’ Be sure
to tell students that the cover picture is not that of the
Martians, but of their machines.
After reading
10 Write: Chapter 2 begins with the main character
sitting in his comfortable English home and writing
in his study. By the end of Chapter 3 he is alone on a
blackened common and running for his life. In pairs,
students write a different story but they must start
and end with these key scenes. Walk round the class
and help students as they write. Finally, choose some
of the students to read out their stories to the rest of
the class.
11 Check predictions with artwork: Ask students
to compare Wells description of the Martians
on pages 8–9 with the pictures they have drawn.
Students can draw a picture of the Martians
according to Wells’s description. Then ask them
whose description they prefer, that of Wells or that
of the artwork they voted for.
12 Role play: Tell students that on page 13 there are
arguments that Ogilvy made against the possibility
of the Martians capturing the Earth. There are also
objections to his argument. Put the students into
pairs, one taking the role of Ogilvy, the other the role
of the writer. They have an argument for and against
the possibility of the Martians capturing the Earth.
They should also make up new arguments. Students
will judge who has made the most convincing
argument.
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Teacher’s notes
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The War of the Worlds
Chapters 5– 6
After reading
13 Write: In these chapters, the main character makes
several important decisions which save his life. Ask
students to work in small groups and make a list of
these decisions and actions. Finally, ask each of the
groups in turn to read out one item on their list.
Encourage classroom discussion of each item and
draw the students’ attention to the similarities and
differences between the groups’ lists.
14 Artwork and discuss: The description of the tripod
is on page 18. Have students draw a picture of the
tripod and then ask them: Why do you think that
readers at the end of the nineteenth century and at the
beginning of the twentieth century would think that
the tripod is so horrible? Are there any similarities with
contemporary conceptions of machines and beings from
outer space, such as Darth Vader?
15 Role play: Tell students: You will take the roles of the
soldier that the writer meets and a newspaper reporter.
The reporter asks the soldier about what happened
to the field gun team. The soldier tells the reporter
the information that is in the first full paragraph on
page 21. The reporter also asks the soldier what he thinks
will happen. The soldier will try to predict what will
happen to the Martians. Listen to the pairs as they
speak and help with pronunciation and intonation.
16 Role play: Put students into pairs. Student A is the
curate who does not understand what is happening
and asks the Martian, ‘What does it mean?’ Student B
is a Martian and gives an explanation of why they
have come to Earth and are destroying buildings and
killing people.
Chapters 7–9
After reading
17 Discuss: When people are in extreme difficulty
or danger they act in ways which they would not
usually. Ask students to find examples from these
three chapters. Can they think of any other examples
from their own experiences or from true stories they
have heard? Finally ask the class if they think that
people act better or worse under such circumstances.
What is the most popular viewpoint?
18 Write: Have students look up ‘declaration’ and
‘martial law’ in their dictionaries. Tell students: You
are the Prime Minister and you have decided to declare
martial law in London. You must write a declaration to
the citizens of London telling them what they can and
cannot do. Students read their declarations of martial
law to the class and then vote on most convincing
example.
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19 Write: Tell students: You are the writer’s brother and
you are going to send a telegram telling your brother
what is happening in London. But there are two
conditions, you don’t have very much money and you
don’t want to alarm your brother. So, your telegram must
be short, informative, and optimistic. Students vote on
the most amusing telegram. (There is the possibility
of humorous telegrams because of the contrast
between the conditions in London and the need to
be optimistic.)
20 Research and debate: Remind students that Wells’s
stories predicted many future scientific inventions.
One of them is the ‘Black Smoke.’ Have students use
the library or Internet to research the mustard gas
used in the First World War. Topics include: The
effects of poison gas; which country first used poison
gas in the war; if more than one country used it;
whether it was considered illegal according to the
rules of war, and why. With the saying ‘All’s fair in
love and war’ as a debatable theme, and the history
of nuclear and biological weapons as a backdrop,
students can debate the morality of the use of poison
gas.
Chapters 10–12
Before reading
21 Guess: Ask students to guess what the title of the
chapter, The Thunder Child, might mean. Each
student will explain what it could be and how it will
affect the story.
22 Guess: The beginning of Chapter 10 says that the
Martians could have killed the whole population of
London on Monday. But they did not. Ask students
to guess why the Martians did not and what they
think the Martians are going to do.
After reading
23 Write: Students take the point of view of either the
brother of the writer or Mrs Elphinstone. The brother
writes a letter to the writer describing the two women,
and how he feels about them. The two women write
a letter to the doctor, Mrs Elphinstone’s husband
who is also the young woman’s brother, describing
the writer’s brother and how they feel about him, and
perhaps how they feel about each other. Choose one
or two of the best letters to be read to class.
Chapters 11–12
24 The curate is frightened and he is going mad. As a
result, the writer kills him to save his own life. Why
does the writer hit the curate? Did he want to kill him,
do you think? Was he right? Students work individually
or in small groups. Ask them to think of ways in
which the writer could have prevented the killing
from happening.
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The War of the Worlds
25 Artwork: Have students read the description of
the Martians on pages 54–55. Then tell them they
are to make a mask of a Martian, according to the
description they have read, or, if they prefer, as they
imagine the Martians to be. After having made the
masks the students, in pairs, write and perform
a dialogue in front of the class about why they
came to Earth and what they think about human
beings. Encourage students to use their bodies to
communicate and, if you and they wish, to imitate
the howling sounds that are mentioned on page 35.
26 Check: Check if any students correctly guessed
the Martians’ intentions in activity 22. Then, ask
students to discuss whether the Martians are similar
to carnivorous human beings. Could planet Earth then
be considered an enormous farm that would supply the
Martians with food? Would that be a morally acceptable
explanation for their behaviour? Are there any parallels
in human history?
27 Research: Have students look up ‘earthling’ in their
dictionaries. Ask students: Why are the Martians
heavier on Earth than they are on Mars? If Earthlings,
a delightful word generally only found in science fiction,
went to each of the planets in the solar system, would
they be lighter or heavier? Have students discuss and
answer these questions in class, and before the next
class they should find out through the library or
Internet if they were correct. Answers can be
corroborated in the following class.
28 Research, discuss: Have students research telepathy
on the Internet. Possible questions to be answered are:
Do scientists believe that telepathy exists? If so, what
kind of communication is possible with telepathy? Have
there been famous cases of telepathy? Is it possible to
develop telepathic powers? Do certain cultures believe
and practise telepathy? Students then discuss the
theme, ‘If telepathy exists, what are its possible
consequences?’
29 Debate: At the end of the war the writer is put on
trial for the murder of the curate. Students can take
the roles of the writer, his lawyer, the prosecution, and
the judge. Other possible roles include the ghost of
the curate, the dog, and the Martian. The other
students will be the jury and according to the
arguments made by the defence and the prosecution,
they will decide the innocence or guilt of the writer.
Chapters 13–15
Before reading
30 Predict: Ask students: What will be the conclusion of
the book? Will the Earthlings finally defeat the Martians?
What will happen to the writer’s brother and the two
women? Will the writer find his wife? Are there any
other questions that can be answered about the
conclusion?
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After reading
31 Check: Have students check their predictions in
activity 30. Ask students: Are you satisfied with the
ending? Were all your questions answered concerning
what happened? Were there any clues earlier in the novel
about how the novel would end?
32 Discuss: Ask the class to think about the soldier’s
plan to survive under the Martians. Is it a good plan
or not? Solicit different opinions from the students.
Next, put the students into groups and tell them that
they are living in a world where the Martians cannot
be defeated. Each group must work out a plan for
survival. Finally, the groups present their ideas to the
rest of the class.
33 Write: Tell students: If the germs had not killed the
Martians, how do you imagine The War of the Worlds
would have ended? Each student writes a new ending
for the novel, with the possibility that either the
Martians or the Earthlings are victorious, or perhaps
there will be a completely different alternative!
Students can read their ending to the class.
34 Write and sing: Students write their own lyrics to the
narrator’s crazy song, ‘The Last Man in the World’
(or ‘The Last Woman in the World’). The music to
the song can be original or from a favourite song.
35 Role play: Students work in pairs. Ask them to
prepare and then act out the following conversation:
Student A: You are the writer. It is the first time that
you have seen your wife since the war. Is she all right?
How did she survive? What happened to her? Ask her
questions and answer any questions she has about
you, too. Student B: You are the writer’s wife. You
thought your husband was dead but now he has
arrived home. Ask him questions about the war. What
happened to him and what did he see? Answer any
questions he has about you, too.
Extra activities
36 Discuss: What is the greatest threat to human beings
today? Ask the class to think about this question and
then prompt different students to give their answers
and their reasons. They should think about issues
such as the destruction of the world’s natural
environment, the economic imbalance between
countries, incurable diseases, etc. as well as the threat
of war from other countries (or other planets!).
37 Discuss: The writer mentions some possible ways
of avoiding future attacks from Martians. Can you
think of some ideas from today’s world which might help?
What are they, and how could they be used against the
Martians in this book?
Vocabulary activities
For the Word List and vocabulary activities, go to
www.penguinreaders.com.
The War of the Worlds - Teacher’s notes of 5
Activity worksheets LEVEL 5
B1343
The War of the Worlds
While reading
Introduction, pages v–ix
1 Complete the following sentences by matching
(a–h) to (1–8).
a These creatures have weapons that …..
b Wells understood a great deal about …..
c Wells was given a free place at college …..
d While Wells recovered from an accident …..
e Wells’s first novel was …..
f Wells fell in love with Moura Budgerd, …..
g When Orson Wells made a radio broadcast of
The War of the Worlds …..
h Wells lived through …..
1) he had time to write.
2) The Time Machine.
3) human behaviour and the psychology of
terror.
4) his translator.
5) no human being has ever known.
6) to study science.
7) two world wars.
8) people thought it was real and they
panicked.
Chapters 1–2
2 Are these statements about Mars true (T) or
false (F) according to the book?
a Mars receives half the light and heat
from the sun that our world does.
c
b Mars is younger than our world.
c
c Life on Mars’s surface began a long time
before this Earth cooled down.
c
d Mars has air but no water.
c
e Mars is getting warmer all the time.
c
f The oceans of Mars cover two thirds
of its surface.
c
g The end of all life is an immediate
problem for the Martians.
c
h Martians’ mathematical knowledge
appears to be much more developed
than ours.
c
i a great light was seen in 1894, on the
surface of Mars.
c
3 Read this paragraph about Chapter 2. There
are 10 wrong words. Circle them and write
the correct words instead.
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(a) Ogilvy was the last person to see the Thing.
(b) He got up soon to find it. (c) When he
found the Thing he saw the top of the box
beginning to turn. (d) He thought that someone
was trying to hide and he wanted to help.
(e) The Thing was too dirty and he couldn’t get
his hands on it. (f ) He ran to Woking and told
some tourists but nobody believed him. (g) Then
he saw Henderson, the astronomer, and told
him the news. (h) He said that a meteorite had
landed. (i) But Henderson was deaf in both ears
and he couldn’t hear him. (j) After visiting the
Thing again, Henderson and Ogilvy went to the
post office to send a telegram to London.
Chapters 3–5
4 Read Chapter 3 carefully then close the book.
How much can you remember about the
Martians? What do they look like? How did
they arrive? Write as much as you can.
5 Choose the right answer.
a The newspaper reports of the Martian attacks
are frightening / unbelievable / inaccurate.
b The writer borrows a horse and cart so he can
escape / attack the Martians / go home.
c The writer hides from the tripods in the
common / his house / Woking station.
d Both the writer and the soldier are exhausted /
safe / burnt.
e I ran crying loudly / quietly / silently as a child
might do.
f A Martian would weigh three / five / eight
times more on Earth than on Mars.
6 What happened first? What happened next?
Write the numbers 1–7.
a c The invisible ray killed the group with the
white flag.
b c Everyone expected a man to come out.
c c The creature fell over the edge of the
cylinder and into the pit.
d c The end of the cylinder was being screwed
out from within.
e c Two men and a woman laughed at the
writer.
f c The writer and his wife left their house
and went to Maybury.
g c The writer returned to Horsell Common.
The War of the Worlds - Activity worksheets of 2
Activity worksheets LEVEL 5
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The War of the Worlds
Chapters 6–7
7 Answer these questions.
a Where does the writer want to escape to?
b Why does the soldier want to go to London?
c How many tripods does the army hit?
d Where does the writer meet the curate?
e Where has the curate escaped from?
f How do the Martians react when one of them
is hit? What does this suggest? Does it make
you feel differently about them?
Chapters 8–9
8 Match the sentences (a–h) to the correct
endings (1–8).
a The Martians communicated to each other
by …..
b The Ripley gunners …..
c The fallen Martian used its voice, and
immediately …..
d One of its three legs …..
e Seven Martians spread out, at equal distances
between Weybridge and Ripley, each carrying
…..
f The writer crawled into some bushes …..
g The tubes were used to fire large cylinders
that, when they hit the ground …..
h The smoke was heavy and when it began to
sink down it …..
1) by the side of the road.
2) behaved like a liquid.
3) let out an enormous amount of thick
black smoke.
4) had never been in action before.
5) a thick black tube.
6) loud howls.
7) had been broken.
8) a second one answered it.
Chapters 10–12
9 Complete these sentences.
a The Martians moved backwards and forwards
over the hill spreading…………………….. .
b There were many ships on the Thames,
attracted by …………………… offered by
the refugees.
c Many ships became stuck together
…………………… and the sailors had to
fight against people who tried to get on from
the riverside.
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d The sixth cylinder fell in………………….. .
e The Thunder Child was a ………………… .
10 Write the words from the box in the right
places.
constant crawled destroyed increased
intended metallic refused
surrounded unconscious
a The writer and the curate are ………………
by Black Smoke for two days.
b Although the writer ……………… to travel
alone, the curate decided to come with him.
c The curate hid in a garden hut and
……………… to move.
d When the ceiling fell in, the writer was
knocked ……………… .
e As soon as the writer began eating, the curate
……………… towards him.
f With their ……………… weight on Earth,
the Martians found it difficult to move
without machines.
g The writer soon grows tired of the curate’s
……………… talking.
h The Martian’s tentacle made a ………………
sound on the kitchen floor.
i When the writer finally leaves the house,
he discovers that the local area has been
completely ……………… .
Chapters 13–15
11 The soldier has thought carefully about the
world’s future. Look at these sentences and
tick (3) the sentences he would agree with
and cross (7) the sentences he would disagree
with.
c
a All human beings are the same.
b The Martians have already built a flying
machine.
c
c Human beings will beat the Martians in
a few years.
c
d It’s better to live freely and in danger
than to live a comfortable life without
freedom.
c
e The bravest and strongest humans will
live underground and the weak ones
will live with the Martians.
c
f It will be important to look after the
weak humans as well as the strong in
a new underground world.
c
The War of the Worlds - Activity worksheets of 2
Progress test
LEVEL 5
B1343
PENGUIN READERS
Teacher Support Programme
The War of the Worlds
Photocopiable
Chapters 1– 4
Chapters 9–10
1 Are these statements true (T) or false (F)?
a The first thing that came out of the cylinder
was a man, a little like a person on Earth.
b Ogilvy, Stent, Henderson, and others went
to the pit waving a white flag.
c The writer’s wife didn’t believe what he told
her about the Martians.
d At night a light-ray swept around the
common and the Heat-Ray followed it.
e At about eleven, soldiers came, but they
didn’t take the situation very seriously.
f The milkman thought the Martians should
all be killed.
4 Choose names from the box to answer these
questions.
c
c
c
c
c
c
Chapters 5–8
2 Choose the words in the box to answer these
questions. Not all words in box will be used.
pub owner Death soldier white pink
thunder tripod curate captain
a What colour was the face of the writer’s wife when
he returned to Maybury? ……………
b What burst like a gun overhead? ……………
c What was stepping over trees? ……………
d Whose body did the writer find? ……………
e Who came into the writer’s garden? ……………
f Who did the writer say was coming to the old man?
……………
3 Circle the best answer in italics.
a The soldier suggested going towards London where
he could look for his family / hide from the Martians /
rejoin his company.
b In Byfleet the soldiers were telling people to
leave and helping them to pack their belongings /
load their carts / find food for the trip.
c Four Martian machines disappeared, far away over
the low trees towards Chertsey / burned house / river.
d When some shells were fired at the Martians and
missed, the fourth shell almost hit it / went past and
hit the river / exploded right in its face.
e The curate told the writer to come and hide in the
church / that the church was still standing / that the
church was destroyed by the Martians.
c Pearson Education Limited 2008
Mr Elphinstone writer’s brother Mrs Elphinstone
Miss Elphinstone the writer
a
b
c
d
e
Who is George? ……………………
Who is the doctor’s wife? ……………………
Who is the doctor’s sister? ……………………
Who steals a bicycle? ……………………
Who is the brother of the person who lives in
London? ……………………
Chapters 11–12
5 Identify the words in italics with the correct
number.
a ‘I think they are outside.’ …..
b ‘It’s hit this house and buried us under the ruins.’
…..
c I thought that it might not be long enough to reach
me. …..
d I thought that if I could attract it quietly, I might
be able to kill it and eat it. …..
e He fell forwards and lay flat on the floor. …..
f I tried threatening him, and then I hit him. …..
4) the Martians
1) the writer
5) the dog
2) the fifth cylinder
6) the curate
3) the tentacle
Chapters 13–15
6 Choose the right answers in italics.
a The writer and others did not understand what
would happen to the Martians because terror and
disaster / pride and prejudice / joy and wisdom had
blinded their minds.
b By spending / paying / lending with a million lives
human beings have bought their right to Earth.
c Human beings have not tried / been unable /
developed the ability to fight against germs.
d Earth is our home and would be even if the
Martians were ten times as strange / as strong /
as ugly as they are.
e When the writer realized that the Martians were
dead his heart grew very heavy / quite sad / light with
happiness.
The War of the Worlds - Progress test of 1
Answer keys
LEVEL 5
B1343
PENGUIN READERS
Teacher Support Programme
The War of the Worlds
Book key
1
2
3
4 5 6
7
a No b Yes c Yes
Open answers
a south b north c Richmond
a T b T c F d F e T
1 c 2 e 3 a 4 d 5 b 6 f
a cylinder b man c tentacles d talk to
e ray of light f stillness
He feels nervous interest, then worry, then fear and
horror after the deaths of Ogilvy and the others.
9–10 Open answers
11 1 e 2 h 3 a 4 g 5 c 6 b 7 d 8 f
12 a F b F c T d T e T
13 a The soldier is talking to the writer, saying that he
should not go straight across country to get back to
Leatherhead.
b The officer is talking to the soldier and the writer
when they meet in the woods.
c An old man is talking to the writer about his
flower-pots; he doesn’t understand the dangerous
situation they are in.
d The curate is talking to the writer, when he wakes
up and asks for water.
e The writer is talking to the curate, who is on the
edge of madness and is asking if the creatures have
taken over the Earth.
14 Open answers
15 a howling
b Weybridge
c crawls into some bushes
d poisonous smoke
e an empty house.
f defeated by the Martians.
16 a 3 b 5 c 2 d 1 e 4
17–20 Open answers
21 a YES b NO c NO d NO e YES f YES
g YES
22 round, eyes, nose, back, heart, stomach, blood, sleep,
thought
23 a the curate
b the writer
c a Martian
d a Martian
e a Martian
c Pearson Education Limited 2008
24 a They jump from bridges, pay or rush onto the
boats.
b They steal, buy it and eat horses.
c He thinks they are confused because they haven’t
seen a large Earth machine before.
25 Open answers
26 a 3 b 7 c 3 d 3 e 3 f 7 g 3
27 1 f 2 d 3 b 4 g 5 h 6 c 7 a 8 e
28–39 Open answers
Discussion activities key
1– 4 Open answers
5 England was perhaps the most powerful country in
the world at the end of the nineteenth century. The
Martians went there to immediately crush resistance.
6 –25 Open answers
26 The Martians intend to use the human beings as
a food supply. Human beings have used domestic
animals for their own food supplies.
27 Martians are heavier on Earth because the gravity of
Earth is more powerful than on Mars.
28–30 Open answers
31 Germs defeat the Martians. We do not know what
happened to the writer’s brother and the two women.
but presumably his brother survived as he told the
writer of his experiences during the attack. The writer
finds his wife.
32–37 Open answers
Activity worksheets key
1
2
3
4
a 5 b 3 c 6 d 1 e 2 f 4 g 8 h 7
a T b F c T d F e F f F g T h T
i T
a last > first
b soon > early
c box > cylinder
d hide > escape
e dirty > hot
f tourists > local people
g astronomer > journalist
h meteorite > cylinder
i both ears > one ear
j post office > railway station
Open answers
The War of the Worlds - Answer keys of 2
Answer keys
LEVEL 5
B1343
PENGUIN READERS
Teacher Support Programme
The War of the Worlds
5 a inaccurate
b escape
c his house
d exhausted
e silently
f three
6 a 5 b 3 c 4 d 2 e 6 f 7 g 1
7 a Leatherhead / South Coast / another country
b to rejoin his company
c one
d by the river near Walton
e Weybridge
f Open answers
8 a 6 b 4 c 8 d 7 e 5 f 1 g 3 h 2
9 a their poison clouds
b enormous sums of money
c under the Tower Bridge
d Wimbledon
e warship
10 a surrounded
b intended
c refused
d unconscious
e crawled
f increased
g constant
h metallic
i destroyed
11 a 7 b 3 c 7 d 7 e 3 f 7
c Pearson Education Limited 2008
Progress test key
1 a F b T c F d F e F f T
2 a white
b thunder
c tripod
d pub owner
e soldier
f Death
3 a rejoin his company
b load their carts
c low trees towards Chertsey
d exploded right in its face
e that the church was destroyed by the Martians
4 a Mrs Elphinstone
b Mrs Elphinstone
c Miss Elphinstone
d writer’s brother
e writer
5 a Martians
b fifth cylinder
c tentacle
d dog
e curate
f writer
6 a terror and disaster
b paying
c developed the ability
d strong
e light with happiness
The War of the Worlds - Answer keys of 2