ISSN:1532-558X - Volume II, Number 2

Cornel Adam Lengyel

THE STEEL STATUE

Alexander Golt wanted to be remembered for at least a thousand years. A refugee from Munich, he was a short, homely, bad-tempered little artist, without friends, patrons or relatives. He had one shrunken black suit to his name and a worn portfolio crammed with drawings and blueprints. He spoke broken English; when excited, he stuttered badly.

His ambition was not unique. The most unlikely people may develop an itch for immortality. As children they carve their names in school desks or living trees. As grown men they invent gadgets, run for office, beget sons or daughters, in the hope that for a space of days they will be remembered, that even after death a trace of their earthly doings will not be completely dissipated.

In Golt this common itch had become a persistent rage, a hidden fire which put a glitter in his eyes and a restlessness in his bones. He had been pushed around since early childhood. Soon after his arrival in San Francisco, he learnt that his widowed mother had been liquidated in a gas wagon and that his only sister had disappeared in Ravensbrueck. Knowing that if he had remained at home, he would no longer be alive, he felt an even greater urgency to impress the true meaning of Alexander Golt on the hard surface of the world.

Up to the age of thirty he had not done anything to distinguish himself. A moody, unsocial fellow, he had earned his living as a part-time draftsman for various engineering firms. In his leisure he read Also Spach Zarathustra, made surrealistic studies of insects and constructed complicated abstractions of blown glass and copper wire. He had held several exhibits which passed unnoticed. Golt did not mind, he was biding his time: for nearly a decade he had been groping for one irresistible idea and the one indestructible medium.

Golt wanted to be sure of durable fame. He despised the ordinary means of acquiring and keeping it. "Libraries are burnt," he would point out in debates with himself. "Museums are bombed. Murderers are sanctified. History is written by liars!" He could not depend on posterity. Weren't there great poets among the Babylonians whose epics were lost forever? Gilgamesh was but one of a hundred heroes. Words were fickle as air. He knew for a certainty that one day the English men spoke so glibly would become a dead dialect, like Sanskrit or Aramaic, and that fragments of Hamlet would be painfully deciphered by new Senegalese sages.

Golt knew that there had been saints as wise as Gautama or the Nazarene, yet no one alive heard of them. Old wisdom lost its meaning. Men's thoughts and tongues changed. Their doctrines were unstable as the wind. Surely, Atlantis had its Plato; Lemuria, its Aristotle?

Golt had no use for heroes. Men of action who messed around in the entrails of the here and the now, dealt in a most uncertain element. Who remembered the Sumerian conquistadors and their earth-shaking deeds? Sargon, Akbar—their true deeds were soon falsified into legend, and after hardly a thousand years the legend faded into thin air.

Monuments and marble temples were also perishable. Troy itself was built on the top of seven towns. As for Baalbek, who knows how many ruined cities served for its foundation? Those who painted delicate images on canvas were most careless of their fame. In a few generations their colored dreams would fade, dissolving in a little dirt. Who remembered the great artists of ancient China or India—artists greater than Praxiteles or Leonardo? Golt had little faith in men's memories. What they preserved was but a tiny fraction of what had happened, a fragment of the great and wonderful works which men of genius had created. No, he could not trust his fame to perishable paper or marble or legend. He had to be sure that nothing would destroy his work.

After much speculation in the New World, Golt dreamed a giant dream. He, Alexander Golt, would build a statue of a new metal, stainless steel, unaffected by the elements; a statue taller than the Empire State Building, heavier than a battleship, and more enduring than the Sphinx! It would stand on Mount Tamalpais, overlooking the Ocean and San Francisco Bay. It would serve as a beacon to both East and West, a counterpart of the Statue of Liberty.

Golt saw the details of the stupendous silver figure clearly as in a vision. He saw the smiling upturned face, enigmatic, sublime, at times half-hidden by enormous sea clouds. He saw the radiant arms outstretched in a universal embrace, a gesture of brotherhood toward the Far East where lived hundred of millions of much-troubled children, the submerged half of mankind. Pacificus, he called his statue; it symbolized world peace. Men who flew and men who sail ships would see it scores of miles off the coast.

To build his colossus, Golt knew, would require not only financial resources, but also monstrous gall and cunning. Carefully, he laid his plans of attack. Working in a little furnished room off Montgomery Street, for nearly three years, he constructed diagram after diagram, changed his blueprints, revised his estimates.

One spring morning, after the capitulation of France, he felt his hour had come. Portfolio under arm, he called on San Francisco's most prominent rabbi. Stuttering, he unfolded his great pain. The rabbi listened to him, perplexed. Was the little man mad or was he touched with the authentic fire.

Golt became rhapsodic.

"More than two thousand years ago, Hosea said, 'The swords shall be beaten into plowshares!' But are they? I ask you, are they? No! My ears are deaf with the rattling of swords! But it can be stopped! It must be stopped!" He pointed dramatically to the blueprints. "My statue will put Hosea's vision before the world's eyes. Out of a million swords I'll cast his right arm: out of a million bayonets I'll build his feet! Rabbi: will you help me make the prophet's words come true?"

To get rid of him, the rabbi sent him to a trustee of the synagogue, one of the city's wealthiest financiers and a patron of the arts. Golt went. He displayed his diagrams and estimates. Bland and watchful, the rich man listened to him with a skeptical smile.

"I need a thousand tons of stainless steel," announced Golt. I need cement and machinery. I need 300 artists, 600 metal workers, 800 helpers and apprentices. I'll give them work for seven years. Your name will be remembered as the greatest of patrons. Generations will bless your memory!"

The financier remained skeptical. "It's beyond my means," he said. "Your project requires the resources of the Federal Treasury." He gave Golt a check, however, and letter to a congressman.

Everything was going according to plan. Golt left, sure of his mission. He flew to Washington. He harangued congressmen and senators. He faced committee after committee. He saw the President. "America is the world's greatest power and its greatest hope," Alexander Golt proclaimed. "America stands for peace and brotherhood! My statue will be a symbol of what America stands for!"

The government yielded eventually. Funds were appropriated; a commission was organized; the work could begin.

Every nerve in his body singing with silent ecstasy, Golt took charge of the project. Mount Tamalpais was cleared. An army of workmen built barracks. Surveyors came; the foundations for the colossus were laid. Ordinary men now looked on Alexander Golt with awe. He himself was awed by his triumph. Generations would rise and perish like the grass, but he, Alexander Golt, would be remembered for a thousand years!

A year later came Pearl Harbor.

A telegram from Washington canceled the project. The giant legs of Pacificus were dismantled. The steel was needed for tanks and battleships. Fortifications were installed on Mount Tamalpais. Before long, Alexander Golt himself received greetings from the President. Presently, he sailed out the Golden Gate, seaman second class, bound for Tarawa. His ship was plated with steel from his unfinished statue. Torpedoed in the South Pacific, she sank within a few minutes and her entire crew was lost.


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