The Passion
Considered
as an
Uphill Bicycle Race
by Alfred
Jarry
Barabbas,
slated to race, was scratched.
Pilate, the
starter, pulling out his clepsydra or water clock, an operation which wet his
hands unless he had merely spit on them -- Pilate gave the send-off.
Jesus got
away to a good start.
In those
days, according to the excellent sports commentator St Mathew, it was customary
to flagellate the sprinters at the start the way a coachman whips his horses.
The whip both stimulates and gives a hygienic massage. Jesus, then, got off in
good form, but he had a flat right away. A bed of thorns punctured the whole
circumference of his front tyre.
Today in
the shop windows of bicycle dealers you see a reproduction of this veritable
crown of thorns as an ad for puncture-proof tyres. But Jesus's was an ordinary
single-tube racing tyre.
The two
thieves, obviously in cahoots and therefore 'thick as thieves', took the lead.
It is not
true that there were any nails. The three objects usually shown in the ads belong
to a rapid-change tyre tool called the 'Jiffy'.
We had
better begin by telling about the spills; but before that the machine itself
must be described.
The bicycle
frame in use today is of relatively recent invention. It appeared around 1890.
Previous to that time the body of the machine was constructed of two tubes
soldered together at right angles. It was generally called the right-angle or
cross bicycle. Jesus, after his puncture, climbed the slope on foot, carrying
on his shoulder the bike frame, or, if you will, the cross.
Contemporary
engravings reproduce this scene from photographs. But it appears that the sport
of cycling, as a result of the well-known accident which put a grievous end to
the Passion race and which was brought up to date almost on its anniversary by
the similar accident of Count Zborowski on the Turbie slope -- the sport of
cycling was for a time prohibited by state ordinance. That explains why the
illustrated magazines, in reproducing this celebrated scene, show bicycles of a
rather imaginary design. They confuse the machine's cross frame with that other
cross, the straight handlebar. They represent Jesus with his hands spread on
the handlebars, and it is worth mentioning in this connection that Jesus rode
lying flat on his back in order to reduce his air resistance.
Note also
that the frame or cross was made of wood, just as wheels are to this day.
A few
people have insinuated falsely that Jesus's machine was a draisienne, an
unlikely mount for a hill-climbing contest. According to the old cyclophile
hagiographers, St. Briget, St. Gregory of Tours ,
and St. Irene, the cross was equipped with a device which they name
suppendaneum. There is no need to be a great scholar to translate this as
'pedal'.
Lipsius,
Justinian, Bosius, and Erycius Puteanus describe another accessory which one
still finds, according to Cornelius Curtius in 1643, on Japanese crosses; a
protuberance of leather or wood on the shaft which the rider sits astride --
manifestly the seat or saddle.
This
general description, furthermore, suits the definition of a bicycle current
among the Chinese: "A little mule which is led by the ears and urged along
by showering it with kicks."
We shall
abridge the story of the race itself, for it has been narrated in detail by
specialized works and illustrated by sculpture and painting visible in
monuments built to house such art.
There are
fourteen turns in the difficult Golgotha
course. Jesus took his first spill at the third turn. His mother, who was in
the stands, became alarmed.
His
excellent trainer, Simon the Cyrenian, who but for the thorn accident would
have been riding out in front to cut the wind, carried the machine.
Jesus,
though carrying nothing, perspired heavily. It is not certain whether a female
spectator wiped his brown, but we know that Veronica, a girl reporter, got a
good shot of him with her Kodak.
The second
spill came at the seventh turn on some slippery pavement. Jesus went down for
the third time at the eleventh turn, skidding on a rail.
The Israelite
deminondaines waved their handkerchiefs at the eighth.
The
deplorable accident familiar to us all took place at the twelfth turn. Jesus
was in a dead heat at the time with the thieves. We know that he continued the
race airborne -- but that is another story.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario