Short story from 70s or 80s: statue of a cockroach brought back from the future












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I’m trying to identify a short story my dad read to me as a child. He said it was from a compilation of short stories around the theme apocalypse and time-travel.
The plot line is something about scientists that find a way to send things back and forth between the present and the future. The story ends with a small statue of a cockroach in a plumber's outfit coming through the machine.










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    14














    I’m trying to identify a short story my dad read to me as a child. He said it was from a compilation of short stories around the theme apocalypse and time-travel.
    The plot line is something about scientists that find a way to send things back and forth between the present and the future. The story ends with a small statue of a cockroach in a plumber's outfit coming through the machine.










    share|improve this question



























      14












      14








      14







      I’m trying to identify a short story my dad read to me as a child. He said it was from a compilation of short stories around the theme apocalypse and time-travel.
      The plot line is something about scientists that find a way to send things back and forth between the present and the future. The story ends with a small statue of a cockroach in a plumber's outfit coming through the machine.










      share|improve this question















      I’m trying to identify a short story my dad read to me as a child. He said it was from a compilation of short stories around the theme apocalypse and time-travel.
      The plot line is something about scientists that find a way to send things back and forth between the present and the future. The story ends with a small statue of a cockroach in a plumber's outfit coming through the machine.







      story-identification short-stories time-travel






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      edited Dec 22 '18 at 12:33









      user14111

      99.5k6388498




      99.5k6388498










      asked Dec 22 '18 at 9:39









      Cecilie

      712




      712






















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          18














          "The Figure", a short story by Edward Grendon (pseudonym of Lawrence LeShan), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, July 1947, available at the Internet Archive. If your dad read it in an anthology of time-travel stories, it was probably Travels Through Time, a 1981 hardcover edited by Isaac Asimov, Martin H. Greenberg, and Charles G. Waugh.




          How far in the future our gadget would operate we had no way of knowing. Lasker said he would not even attempt to estimate "when" the field was active. When the power was turned off, anything that was in the cube of forces would
          be brought back to the present space-time. In other words, we had a "grab" that would reach out and drag something back from the future.

          [. . . .]

          The figure on top is standing up very straight and looking upwards. It's dressed only in a wide belt from which a pouch hangs on one side and a flat square box on the
          other. It looks intelligent and is obviously representing either aspiration or a religious theme, or maybe both. You can sense the dreams and ideals of the figure and
          the obvious sympathy and understanding of the artist with them. Lasker says he thinks the statue is an expression of religious feeling. Dettner and I both think it represents aspirations: Per adra ad astra or something of the sort. It's a majestic figure and it's easy to respond to it emphatically with a sort of "upward and onward" feeling. There is only one thing wrong. The figure is that of a beetle.







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            Another one from "50 short science fiction tales"!
            – Organic Marble
            Dec 22 '18 at 14:28











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          18














          "The Figure", a short story by Edward Grendon (pseudonym of Lawrence LeShan), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, July 1947, available at the Internet Archive. If your dad read it in an anthology of time-travel stories, it was probably Travels Through Time, a 1981 hardcover edited by Isaac Asimov, Martin H. Greenberg, and Charles G. Waugh.




          How far in the future our gadget would operate we had no way of knowing. Lasker said he would not even attempt to estimate "when" the field was active. When the power was turned off, anything that was in the cube of forces would
          be brought back to the present space-time. In other words, we had a "grab" that would reach out and drag something back from the future.

          [. . . .]

          The figure on top is standing up very straight and looking upwards. It's dressed only in a wide belt from which a pouch hangs on one side and a flat square box on the
          other. It looks intelligent and is obviously representing either aspiration or a religious theme, or maybe both. You can sense the dreams and ideals of the figure and
          the obvious sympathy and understanding of the artist with them. Lasker says he thinks the statue is an expression of religious feeling. Dettner and I both think it represents aspirations: Per adra ad astra or something of the sort. It's a majestic figure and it's easy to respond to it emphatically with a sort of "upward and onward" feeling. There is only one thing wrong. The figure is that of a beetle.







          share|improve this answer



















          • 1




            Another one from "50 short science fiction tales"!
            – Organic Marble
            Dec 22 '18 at 14:28
















          18














          "The Figure", a short story by Edward Grendon (pseudonym of Lawrence LeShan), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, July 1947, available at the Internet Archive. If your dad read it in an anthology of time-travel stories, it was probably Travels Through Time, a 1981 hardcover edited by Isaac Asimov, Martin H. Greenberg, and Charles G. Waugh.




          How far in the future our gadget would operate we had no way of knowing. Lasker said he would not even attempt to estimate "when" the field was active. When the power was turned off, anything that was in the cube of forces would
          be brought back to the present space-time. In other words, we had a "grab" that would reach out and drag something back from the future.

          [. . . .]

          The figure on top is standing up very straight and looking upwards. It's dressed only in a wide belt from which a pouch hangs on one side and a flat square box on the
          other. It looks intelligent and is obviously representing either aspiration or a religious theme, or maybe both. You can sense the dreams and ideals of the figure and
          the obvious sympathy and understanding of the artist with them. Lasker says he thinks the statue is an expression of religious feeling. Dettner and I both think it represents aspirations: Per adra ad astra or something of the sort. It's a majestic figure and it's easy to respond to it emphatically with a sort of "upward and onward" feeling. There is only one thing wrong. The figure is that of a beetle.







          share|improve this answer



















          • 1




            Another one from "50 short science fiction tales"!
            – Organic Marble
            Dec 22 '18 at 14:28














          18












          18








          18






          "The Figure", a short story by Edward Grendon (pseudonym of Lawrence LeShan), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, July 1947, available at the Internet Archive. If your dad read it in an anthology of time-travel stories, it was probably Travels Through Time, a 1981 hardcover edited by Isaac Asimov, Martin H. Greenberg, and Charles G. Waugh.




          How far in the future our gadget would operate we had no way of knowing. Lasker said he would not even attempt to estimate "when" the field was active. When the power was turned off, anything that was in the cube of forces would
          be brought back to the present space-time. In other words, we had a "grab" that would reach out and drag something back from the future.

          [. . . .]

          The figure on top is standing up very straight and looking upwards. It's dressed only in a wide belt from which a pouch hangs on one side and a flat square box on the
          other. It looks intelligent and is obviously representing either aspiration or a religious theme, or maybe both. You can sense the dreams and ideals of the figure and
          the obvious sympathy and understanding of the artist with them. Lasker says he thinks the statue is an expression of religious feeling. Dettner and I both think it represents aspirations: Per adra ad astra or something of the sort. It's a majestic figure and it's easy to respond to it emphatically with a sort of "upward and onward" feeling. There is only one thing wrong. The figure is that of a beetle.







          share|improve this answer














          "The Figure", a short story by Edward Grendon (pseudonym of Lawrence LeShan), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, July 1947, available at the Internet Archive. If your dad read it in an anthology of time-travel stories, it was probably Travels Through Time, a 1981 hardcover edited by Isaac Asimov, Martin H. Greenberg, and Charles G. Waugh.




          How far in the future our gadget would operate we had no way of knowing. Lasker said he would not even attempt to estimate "when" the field was active. When the power was turned off, anything that was in the cube of forces would
          be brought back to the present space-time. In other words, we had a "grab" that would reach out and drag something back from the future.

          [. . . .]

          The figure on top is standing up very straight and looking upwards. It's dressed only in a wide belt from which a pouch hangs on one side and a flat square box on the
          other. It looks intelligent and is obviously representing either aspiration or a religious theme, or maybe both. You can sense the dreams and ideals of the figure and
          the obvious sympathy and understanding of the artist with them. Lasker says he thinks the statue is an expression of religious feeling. Dettner and I both think it represents aspirations: Per adra ad astra or something of the sort. It's a majestic figure and it's easy to respond to it emphatically with a sort of "upward and onward" feeling. There is only one thing wrong. The figure is that of a beetle.








          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Dec 22 '18 at 12:01

























          answered Dec 22 '18 at 11:27









          user14111

          99.5k6388498




          99.5k6388498








          • 1




            Another one from "50 short science fiction tales"!
            – Organic Marble
            Dec 22 '18 at 14:28














          • 1




            Another one from "50 short science fiction tales"!
            – Organic Marble
            Dec 22 '18 at 14:28








          1




          1




          Another one from "50 short science fiction tales"!
          – Organic Marble
          Dec 22 '18 at 14:28




          Another one from "50 short science fiction tales"!
          – Organic Marble
          Dec 22 '18 at 14:28


















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