Hiram's Glass Paradise Crashes Into the Sea

Curated by Maggid·Edited by Arthur Sabintsev·

Hiram helped Solomon build the Temple, then decided he might never die.

That is the arrogance at the center of Landa's 1919 retelling. Hiram, king of Tyre, remembers David and Solomon as men who needed him. David died. Solomon died. Hiram remains old, rich, and flattered by counselors who are too afraid to contradict him. He turns survival into theology and begins to think of himself as immortal.

Then he builds a paradise in the sea. It is a seven-story palace of colored glass, arranged like a private heaven. Waters surround it. Light passes through it. Hiram sits inside the glittering structure as if he has escaped the ordinary fate of kings.

The sea answers. A storm rises. Thunder shakes the palace. Waves strike the glass until the lower story cracks, and the six levels above it lose their support. The paradise collapses into the water in a thousand pieces.

Hiram survives, but not because he is divine. His life is spared long enough for him to lose everything. Nebuchadnezzar dethrones him, and the old king ends as a captive. The palace breaks the lie before death does. Glass can imitate heaven. It cannot hold it.

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