Maria Antas:
Dear God |
Extracts from the novel
Gud
('God', Schildts, 2006)
Side by side, wolves and antelopes graze on the
juicy grass.
A deer
playfully chases a lion through the bushes.
'Can you
do this?'
Adam crosses
his arms in front of his chest and folds his hands back to front
so that the right hand is on the left and the left hand is on the
right. With his hands folded he twists them downwards and holds
them out. Now they point to Eve, still folded, and still with the
right hand on the left.
Eve tries.
She succeeds, and laughs with delight.
A gentle
breeze is blowing from the east, just strongly enough for the couple
not to be troubled by the heat, but not so they would feel the need
for clothes to keep them warm.
The trees
and the bushes around them are weighed down with stoneless fruits
and nuts with shells that are easy to open. Stingless bees buzz
soporifically around gorgeous flowers.
'But can
you do this?'
Eve puts
her right arm over her head and stretches her hand down so that
her fingers touch her left ear.
'Of course
I can. I can even do it with both hands at once.'
Adam shuts
his eyes and concentrates. He puts his arms over his hand and touches
his left ear with the fingers of his right hand, and his right ear
with those of his left hand. The muscles on his powerful arms grow
taut. Small tufts of hair are visible in his armpits.
A healthy
young man, so young that he is almost a boy.
'You cheated!
You're supposed to put your arm on your head, but you put
it behind your neck.'
But Adam
has lost interest in the game. The couple wade on through the grass,
hand in hand. No ticks cling to their legs. They don't tread on
any burdock. Their vacant, happy gazes view the park around them,
but find nothing special to comment on.
'How long
can you hold your breath, Eve?'
'This
long.' Eve fills her lungs to bursting point and screws up her eyes.
But a large yellow butterfly catches Adam's interest.
'Look!'
Eva lets
the air out in one breath. 'Oh, how big it is!'
'And so
yellow!'
'Yes.'
'What
did you call it?'
Adam hesitates.
He has just given names to several thousand newly created species.
'I think
I called it "big yellow butterfly", or something like
that.'
Above
a bush a triangle is visible. God is standing there behind the bush,
peering at them with a dark look on his face. He is exactly like
Adam, whom he has created in his likeness. They are each other's
mirror image, twins, except that a triangle always floats above
God's head. Moreover, Adam's gaze is good-natured but without expression,
while God's is powerful and resolute and, right now, irritated.
Adam's body was a success, even if the sight of his innocently borne
lack of circumcision taunts God like a thorn in the tender sole
of a foot. But his indolent soul leaves much to be desired. It is
truly no image of its creator's.
The couple
stop beside the babbling brook of Pishon. Adam throws himself lazily
down on the grassy verge. A decorative cheetah comes bounding up.
Adam scratches it absent-mindedly behind its ear.
Eve goes
down to Pishon's grass-covered bank and kneels down with her legs
apart to drink from her cupped hands. Adam has a unique glimpse
of folds of skin that are seldom outlined so clearly as now. Yet
no glimmer of interest awakens in his eyes. No sense either of revulsion
or desire traverses his body. To his vexation, God sees that Adam
is merely picking his teeth with a blade of grass, his mind elsewhere.
Eve has
drunk her fill. She lies down beside Adam. They don't say anything.
No ants clamber over them, and especially not the small red kind
that bites.
A dove
leaves her nest in order to look for something to eat. A female
goshawk sits on the dove's eggs to keep them warm while she is gone.
The lion
lets itself be caught and lies down on its back, laughing. With
exaggerated motions of horror it pretends to give a start when the
deer playfully butts it in the side with small, ineffective nudges.
Adam yawns.
He catches sight of an interesting fruit hanging from the sagging
branch of a bush just out of his reach. He can't be bothered to
stand up, but turns over on his side and slides towards it with
arm outstretched. A soft cylinder rolls over Eve's face. She is
seized by neither revulsion nor desire but gives a little yawn,
wholly uninterested.
God is
furious.
In contrast to the almost empty earth, at the world's beginning
the sky was full of seething life. The heavenly hosts swarmed in
the crystal-clear firmament like starlings before the autumn migration,
but instead of small, chattering birds the angels were radiant white
figures with good singing voices. In their ineffable millions they
filled the heavens from horizon to horizon. They praised God incessantly.
Rapturous cries were heard everywhere. A constant murmur of 'holy,
holy' filled the heavenly spaces like the rumble of breakers on
a seashore.
An exaltation
produced by the sight of God's new creation raised the singing of
the heavenly hosts to new heights. For them the human couple, two
insignificant creatures, were the seeds of a future, one of God's
plans of which they knew no more than that it must be glorious and
holy. A note of expectancy, of anxiety, perhaps, tinged the normal
expression of praise.
God strode
grimly towards his throne-tent. Ecstatic followers jumped and bowed
and scraped around him. With shrill howls, they struck the palms
of their hands against their mouths. They beat drums and shook rattles.
They blew piercingly on shawms and trumpets. Round and round they
whirled, until they fainted from giddiness.
Angels
parted out of God's way like rye curtseying before a gust of wind
on a field. They threw themselves to the ground before him in order
to avoid his all too holy gaze. One little angel was unable to restrain
her curiosity, and peeked furtively up at God's face to see what
it looked like. But God's splendour was too much for her: a little
'pop' was heard, and the little angel was no more.
A monster
with three pairs of wings stood guarding the tent. It was a giant
cherub in a leather hauberk which would have been reminiscent of
a butcher's apron, had it not been dotted with large bronze rivets.
The cherub had a cruel, pockmarked face and an aquiline nose. Shielding
his eyes with one pair of wings, he bowed and pulled the canvas
aside with one hand. With the other he lowered his large, ornate
bronze sword whose sharp point gleamed ready to emit a flash of
lightning.
Inside,
in the dim light of the tent, three young men of the same age as
God and of his likeness Adam
almost boys, therefore were waiting.
They were the archangels Michael, Gabriel and Raphael, the only
angels who had the privilege of looking upon God's countenance and
strength without being destroyed by doing so. They threw themselves
down on all fours and lowered their heads to the ground. A clear
thud was heard as Michael's forehead struck the carpet that covered
the floor of hard-packed earth.
God noted
Michael's zeal with satisfaction, but saw that it was not shared
by all those present. Raphael had not lowered his head to touch
the floor, but had kept it a few inches above, thinking it wouldn't
be noticed. He had begun to take his position for granted. Greeting
a mere formality.
God placed
his foot on the back of Raphael's neck, pressing his head down against
the floor. For a moment, God rested all his weight on his foot.
Then he
went to his throne and sat down.
The archangels
got up from the floor and grouped themselves humbly around him,
their gazes lowered. A mirror imprint of the carpet's pattern was
visible on Raphael's forehead.
'The humans
are lazy. They don't do anything. They have no...'
God blushed slightly '...desire.'
The archangels
were silent. Crushed, overwhelmed.
'It's
crowded up here. Hordes upon hordes. Down there
nothing. How are my power and glory supposed to be seen in an empty
garden?'
'But it
will fill up in time, won't it?' Gabriel asked, carefully. 'All
creatures couple. Adam and Eve, too.'
'Too rarely.'
The silence
in the tent was embarrassing. The songs of praise could be heard
distinctly through the canvas. Filled with foreboding, the archangels
wondered what was expected of them.
'The animals
couple when their bodies tell them to,' said Raphael, after a while.
'As soon as it's the right time of year, they do it. They can't
help it.'
'Yes.
it's like scratching themselves when they itch,' said Michael, obligingly.
'Or urinating, if you'll pardon the expression. They obey their
bodies.'
'Indeed.
But the body ought to obey the soul.'
'Lord,
your wisdom passes all understanding!' exclaimed Raphael, who could
still feel the scraping of the carpet on his forehead. 'If they
had the intelligence to be ashamed they would do it more often.
Things that are forbidden are much more tempting than things that
are allowed.'
'How do
you know that?' God asked suspiciously.
'I've
heard it said,' Raphael replied quickly. 'I personally don't know
anything about it.'
'I mean,
if they acquire intelligence they'll be like us.'
'Lord,
in your wisdom you will be able to prevent it.'
'In your
omniscience,' Gabriel corrected.
'In your
power,' said Michael.
'And glory!'
Raphael and Gabriel shouted together.
The serpent and God were there when Eve ate of the
forbidden fruit.
The world
held its breath.
The east
wind died away. The lion, the wolves and the goshawk raised their
heads and heeded a soundless blast of trumpets.
God quickly
left the spot, the serpent following him like a dog.
Then the
wind changed. A chilly breeze began to blow from the west.
The lion
suddenly struck at the deer with its paw. Flying through the air
in an arc, the deer landed with a thud, its back broken.
The wolves
spat out their grass, organised themselves in hunting formation,
selected the weakest antelope and separated it from the others,
which fled in confusion from this threat which they had never experienced
before.
The goshawk
attacked the returning dove, seized it in its talons, and flew up
with it into a treetop. Blood and feathers began to trickle down.
A raccoon dog scampered up the tree to the nest, and stole the eggs.
Blushing
and avoiding each other's gaze, Adam and Eve picked fig leaves and
clumsily began to tack them together into aprons.
God came
along. A short interrogation, a suitable punishment - the matter
was quickly cleared up as the couple stood in shame, trying not
to eye each other's almost naked bodies. With satisfaction God saw
that Adam's fig leaf, to the latter's annoyance, had begun to rise.
'Now then,
here are some things for you,' God said in a gentler tone, sat down
and began to sew them proper clothes made of leather.
When the
garments were ready Adam and Eve put them on, their souls feeling
lighter, but their bodies unused to the novelty. God gave them a
helping hand. He supported Adam, who with his trousers half on was
trying to balance on one leg, which one particularly fiery small
red ant was biting. Once Adam had tightened his belt and brushed
the ant away, however, he felt calm and secure, freed from his nakedness.
Their
new clothes chafing slightly, the couple left the garden, walked
past the cherubs with their flashing swords and into a new, dry
and hot world.
Not only
the clothes chafed their bodies. Something was irritating their
souls, too. A new and disturbing sensation. As soon as they were
out of sight of the cherubs, Adam tried to put his hand inside Eve's
leather jacket.
'No! Behave
yourself! Not here.'
Adam tried
a second time. Eve pushed his hand away. But not the third time.
* * *
I am who I am.
This is the same as I am who 'who I am' am, which is the
same as I am who "who 'who I am' am" am, and so
on.
I am
who I am is a prison.
The stars were a backdrop for God's inner drama.
Billions upon billions of stars. Billions of years old.
His own
creation. But they had absolutely nothing to say to him. Mute, meaningless.
What was more, he had nothing to ask them. They were an unplanned
result of the primordial ejaculation, his creative spasm.
God blushed.
'How childish I was.'
The distance
from the beginning of puberty to its end is very long. When one
is at the end and looks back to the beginning one thinks one is
seeing a stranger.
God felt
like a god who was quite different from the one who created the
world.
The stars are immobile, as if hewn from granite.
Nothing can dislodge them. Millennium after millennium they sit
there immutably, with no other task than to constitute the bars
of a cosmic cage in which the earth is kept in place, peering out
with its inquisitive eyes and sniffing with its sensitive muzzle.
Without
a universe, no earth. Universe, you have done your bit, you may
go.
But the
universe keeps hanging on, like the last guest when the hosts want
to go to bed.
Once,
time had burst from the primordial seed and spread itself over everything
like a sticky membrane. Now it does nothing of much interest any
more, merely arranges events in continuous chains, with unsurpassed
tedium. Effect is always preceded by cause. It is never the case
that an arrow flies backwards from the target and settles on the
archer's bowstring.
Far away
among the stars, in certain isolated places so distant that they
cannot matter to any healthy thinker, time may, it is true, decelerate
and even reduce its speed to almost nothing. Condensations of space
occur, heavy lumps in its tissue, like stones or balls of seaweed
in the fisherman's net. There things happen slowly, as if they were
wading in thick tar. Right in the middle of these lumps all movement
ceases. The ultimate boredom.
It is
typical that nowhere in the universe are there any regions so thinned
out that in them time is able to go dashing off with a stimulating
enthusiasm. While time is certainly good at dragging its feet, to
ask it to run faster is to ask too much.
And then
space. It expands like rising dough. But the dough is almost ready.
The raisins can scarcely manage to move about any more. How different
it was during those optimistic moments after the primordial ejaculation!
Just like
time, space is practically the same wherever one goes. Here and
there it stretches, of course, that is something that must
be accepted, bearing in mind the enormous volume it contains, though
not enough to allow the production of anything interesting or instructive.
At rare points, the ones where time loses its pull, the garbage
of the heavens, together with failed stars, forms lumps resembling
heavy, concentrated piles of refuse. There space bends groaning
in upon itself. At these monolithic points where nothing happens,
Behemoth sits with a frozen grin doing nothing for an eternal length
of time. What a symbol of monotony!
In spite
of these local variations, space is generally straightforward and
unchanging. It spreads uniformly in all directions without cease.
It need
not be so. One could imagine space being curved like a saddle or
a sphere. In the latter case, if one were endowed with infinite
vision, like God, one could look forward and see oneself from behind
in the distance. But would that be more interesting? No, then one
would complain about the introverted nature of space, and call for
greater openness. The truth is that space can never get it right,
nor does it try to.
The fact
is that no matter how hard one tries to grasp the universe, that
collection of unwarranted accumulations of time, space and matter,
one will never manage to squeeze one drop of meaning from it. It
is like a withered lemon. How different is the earth, where things
constantly happen that may make one smile or weep. Things that have
meaning.
The path
to maturity lies in an acknowledgement of one's own failures.
When God
looked back at his life, he had to admit that there were defects
in his handiwork.
Time after
time he had been pleased with his work immediately after doing it.
'It is good,' he had said. But then it turned out to be not really
good at all. In some cases it was so bad that he had to scrap it
all and start over again, with a Flood, for example. In other cases
he was able to improve it a little, but then one could see that
it was not really new at all, but old, just hastily repaired, as
in the choice of Abraham.
With the
best of intentions he had disciplined his people to keep them in
order and help them to follow his law. He had burned Israelites
by the tens of thousands and sent the lot into exile in Egypt and
Babylon, but were they grateful? No.
Normally,
God would have lost his temper at the thought of their ingratitude,
but now it was as if a great weariness had fallen on him. His boyish,
restless energy was exhausted.
The only
thing he had really enjoyed was sewing leather clothes for Adam
and Eve. It was of course true that he himself had enticed them
to eat of the forbidden fruit and so be ejected from paradise. And
yet. That needle and thread session had been so pleasant. In small
things there is love and satisfaction, but in the great ones, in
the determining of the fate of nations, nothing but hardness and
coldness.
God's
law contained many elements of solicitude, for example, in the stipulations
that one should not harvest all the way to the edge of the field,
so that widows and the poor should be able to pick ears of grain,
or that consideration should be shown to immigrants. But these stipulations
became drowned in the ocean of heartless commandments, prohibitions
and fussy, meaningless statutes about randomly chosen aspects of
holy ritual or everyday life.
The immigrants...
Just as well for them that they had immigrated, for if they had
stayed at home they would have been consigned to destruction, if
God had needed their territories for his chosen people.
God had to admit the truth.
He was not a particularly good god. But he wanted something better.
'I won't shout at them so much.' he
thought. 'Perhaps it's best not to talk to them at all. It just
causes trouble.'
God stared straight up at the stars.
A tear found its way from the corner of his eye, hesitated for a
moment and then rolled quickly down into his ear.
'Being a father seems to be satisfying
and productive. It warms the heart to see a father's concern for
his children.'
God thought of the fathers he had
had to do with, the scoundrel Jacob, Isaac, but above all Abraham.
Would Abraham really have sacrificed
Isaac if Gabriel had not stopped him with his cry? Now God could
not bring himself to brood over that question any more. The usual
wave of suspicious indignation failed to well up inside him. On
the contrary, it now seemed to him that the episode was a little
embarrassing, like Job's boils, and the roof that crashed in on
Job's children.
In fact, there was a small part of
him, deep inside, which hoped that Abraham would not have sacrificed
Isaac. A loving father does not do such things.
God
brooded on the enigma of fatherly love.
He had matured, almost. The collecting mania of adolescence, its
fearful fascination with all things sexual, its boorish way with
women, its easily-wounded egocentricity, its violence and pranks,
were behind him. He had grown up.
'Should I beget a son?'
Translated by David McDuff
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