On that terrible day, when the universal
injustice was committed and Jesus Christ was crucified
in Golgotha among robbers—on that day,
from early morning, Ben-Tovit, a tradesman of Jerusalem,
suffered from an unendurable toothache. His
toothache had commenced on the day before, toward
evening; at first his right jaw started to pain him,
and one tooth, the one right next the wisdom tooth,
seemed to have risen somewhat, and when his tongue
touched the tooth, he felt a slightly painful sensation.
After supper, however, his toothache had passed,
and Ben-Tovit had forgotten all about it—he
had made a profitable deal on that day, had bartered
an old donkey for a young, strong one, so he was very
cheerful and paid no heed to any ominous signs.
And he slept very soundly. But
just before daybreak something began to disturb him,
as if some one were calling him on a very important
matter, and when Ben-Tovit awoke angrily, his teeth
were aching, aching openly and maliciously, causing
him an acute, drilling pain. And he could no
longer understand whether it was only the same tooth
that had ached on the previous day, or whether others
had joined that tooth; Ben-Tovit’s entire mouth
and his head were filled with terrible sensations
of pain, as though he had been forced to chew thousands
of sharp, red-hot nails, he took some water into his
mouth from an earthen jug—for a minute
the acuteness of the pain subsided, his teeth twitched
and swayed like a wave, and this sensation was even
pleasant as compared with the other.
Ben-Tovit lay down again, recalled
his new donkey, and thought how happy he would have
been if not for his toothache, and he wanted to fall
asleep. But the water was warm, and five minutes
later his toothache began to rage more severely than
ever; Ben-Tovit sat up in his bed and swayed back
and forth like a pendulum. His face became wrinkled
and seemed to have shrunk, and a drop of cold perspiration
was hanging on his nose, which had turned pale from
his sufferings. Thus, swaying back and forth
and groaning for pain, he met the first rays of the
sun, which was destined to see Golgotha and the three
crosses, and grow dim from horror and sorrow.
Ben-Tovit was a good and kind man,
who hated any injustice, but when his wife awoke he
said many unpleasant things to her, opening his mouth
with difficulty, and he complained that he was left
alone, like a jackal, to groan and writhe for pain.
His wife met the undeserved reproaches patiently,
for she knew that they came not from an angry heart—and
she brought him numerous good remedies: rats’
litter to be applied to his cheek, some strong liquid
in which a scorpion was preserved, and a real chip
of the tablets that Moses had broken. He began
to feel a little better from the rats’ litter,
but not for long, also from the liquid and the stone,
but the pain returned each time with renewed intensity.
During the moments of rest Ben-Tovit
consoled himself with the thought of the little donkey,
and he dreamed of him, and when he felt worse he moaned,
scolded his wife, and threatened to dash his head
against a rock if the pain should not subside.
He kept pacing back and forth on the flat roof of
his house from one corner to the other, feeling ashamed
to come close to the side facing the street, for his
head was tied around with a kerchief like that of a
woman. Several times children came running to
him and told him hastily about Jesus of Nazareth.
Ben-Tovit paused, listened to them for a while, his
face wrinkled, but then he stamped his foot angrily
and chased them away. He was a kind man and
he loved children, but now he was angry at them for
bothering him with trifles.
It was disagreeable to him that a
large crowd had gathered in the street and on the
neighbouring roofs, doing nothing and looking curiously
at Ben-Tovit, who had his head tied around with a kerchief
like a woman. He was about to go down, when his
wife said to him:
“Look, they are leading robbers
there. Perhaps that will divert you.”
“Let me alone. Don’t
you see how I am suffering?” Ben-Tovit answered
angrily.
But there was a vague promise in his
wife’s words that there might be a relief for
his toothache, so he walked over to the parapet unwillingly.
Bending his head on one side, closing one eye, and
supporting his cheek with his hand, his face assumed
a squeamish, weeping expression, and he looked down
to the street.
On the narrow street, going uphill,
an enormous crowd was moving forward in disorder,
covered with dust and shouting uninterruptedly.
In the middle of the crowd walked the criminals, bending
down under the weight of their crosses, and over them
the scourges of the Roman soldiers were wriggling
about like black snakes. One of the men, he
of the long light hair, in a torn blood-stained cloak,
stumbled over a stone which was thrown under his feet,
and he fell. The shouting grew louder, and the
crowd, like coloured sea water, closed in about the
man on the ground. Ben-Tovit suddenly shuddered
for pain; he felt as though some one had pierced a
red-hot needle into his tooth and turned it there;
he groaned and walked away from the parapet, angry
and squeamishly indifferent.
“How they are shouting!”
he said enviously, picturing to himself their wide-open
mouths with strong, healthy teeth, and how he himself
would have shouted if he had been well. This
intensified his toothache, and he shook his muffled
head frequently, and roared: “Moo-Moo….”
“They say that He restored sight
to the blind,” said his wife, who remained standing
at the parapet, and she threw down a little cobblestone
near the place where Jesus, lifted by the whips, was
moving slowly.
“Of course, of course!
He should have cured my toothache,” replied
Ben-Tovit ironically, and he added bitterly with irritation:
“What dust they have kicked up! Like
a herd of cattle! They should all be driven
away with a stick! Take me down, Sarah!”
The wife proved to be right.
The spectacle had diverted Ben-Tovit slightly—perhaps
it was the rats’ litter that had helped after
all— he succeeded in falling asleep.
When he awoke, his toothache had passed almost entirely,
and only a little inflammation had formed over his
right jaw. His wife told him that it was not
noticeable at all, but Ben-Tovit smiled cunningly—he
knew how kind-hearted his wife was and how fond she
was of telling him pleasant things.
Samuel, the tanner, a neighbour of
Ben-Tovit’s, came in, and Ben-Tovit led him
to see the new little donkey and listened proudly to
the warm praises for himself and his animal.
Then, at the request of the curious
Sarah, the three went to Golgotha to see the people
who had been crucified. On the way Ben-Tovit
told Samuel in detail how he had felt a pain in his
right jaw on the day before, and how he awoke at night
with a terrible toothache. To illustrate it
he made a martyr’s face, closing his eyes, shook
his head, and groaned while the grey-bearded Samuel
nodded his head compassionately and said:
“Oh, how painful it must have been!”
Ben-Tovit was pleased with Samuel’s
attitude, and he repeated the story to him, then went
back to the past, when his first tooth was spoiled
on the left side. Thus, absorbed in a lively
conversation, they reached Golgotha. The sun,
which was destined to shine upon the world on that
terrible day, had already set beyond the distant hills,
and in the west a narrow, purple-red strip was burning,
like a stain of blood. The crosses stood out
darkly but vaguely against this background, and at
the foot of the middle cross white kneeling figures
were seen indistinctly.
The crowd had long dispersed; it was
growing chilly, and after a glance at the crucified
men, Ben-Tovit took Samuel by the arm and carefully
turned him in the direction toward his house.
He felt that he was particularly eloquent just then,
and he was eager to finish the story of his toothache.
Thus they walked, and Ben-Tovit made a martyr’s
face, shook his head and groaned skilfully, while Samuel
nodded compassionately and uttered exclamations from
time to time, and from the deep, narrow defiles, out
of the distant, burning plains, rose the black night.
It seemed as though it wished to hide from the view
of heaven the great crime of the earth.