MY
WISH WAS A GARGOYLE’S COMMAND
By
Jeffrey M. Bowen
As a general rule, the older you
get, the more difficult it becomes for relatives to come up with a unique
present for your birthday. To give me a
grand entrance to my seventh decade, my wife and daughter blew this rule
apart. The result squats in our back
yard, grinning fiercely and looking like the devil. His name is Gondor. He weighs hundreds of pounds and isn’t going
anywhere soon.
Ever since I saw the first
“Ghostbusters” movie, where stony griffins on an apartment building suddenly
break through their shells and turn into drooling dog monsters, I have been
intrigued by gargoyles, grotesques, and chimeras. There are differences among these terms, but
most of us lump them together.
Last spring a visit to our
daughter in Albany took us to a downtown salvage yard. Standing alone amid a collection of 50
concrete RCA dogs all strangely peering in the same direction, I spotted a
large grisly creature crouched on a pedestal, with head-high wings sprouting
from his back. His deep-set eyes seemed
to glow and follow me wherever I wandered.
His ears were huge and hairy, and his gnarly teeth were fixed in an evil
grin. I casually remarked to my kin,
“Gee wouldn’t he look great in our yard?”
A few months later, my family remembered my
wish and returned to rescue the creature from the salvage yard. They were told no one knew which Albany
building he flew down from, but after purchasing the creature at a bargain
price, they it was discovered he would not budge. After all, he was made of concrete and
weighed some 600 pounds.
Ultimately, a forklift got the
creature elevated. Eventually he was
lashed onto the bed of our son-in-law’s pick-up so that my daughter and her
kids could transport the gargoyle to our country home. He created a minor sensation on the Thruway
as he stared menacingly back at anyone tailgating too close. Many who passed the truck drew even and waved
delightedly at our family. It took four
grunting, sweating men to unload my present onto a concrete pad from which he
can grimace at cornfields and startle traffic.
Based on books that came along with him as
presents, it seems that these creatures originated as the works of stonemasons
and sculptors during the Gothic period in the 12th and 13th
centuries, especially in France. Gracing
cathedrals, with holes in their mouths or elsewhere, their purpose was mainly
to drain water off the steep roofs.
Hence, the term “gargoyle” which means drain or gutter. I suspect the term is also related to
gargling and gurgling as well.
Grotesques or chimeras actually
have no holes but are also featured on European rooflines and doorways. They are taken usually to mean fantastic
combinations of human and animal figures.
Historians of this offspring suggests that stonemasons may have built
them into rooflines of churches either to scare off or provoke evil spirits or
to snub noses at the rich donors who funded cathedrals. Today hundreds of these eccentric sculptures
perch unnoticed on city facades and peer down at the traffic. Novelist Stephen King, who prefaced a book on
the subject, firmly believes they are alive.
Inspired by my unique present, I
conducted a facebook contest to give him a name. Gondor, the middle kingdom in Tolkien’s Lord
of the Rings, won the moniker. We
decorated Gondor with a red ribbon at Christmas. He stared at us balefully, but never uttered
a word. I surely hope he never
does.
JMB
2/3/17
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