THE CROSS OF CHRIST 261   THE CRUCIFIXION   The Bellows   From …

Saturday, 20th April 2024

Comment on Gipsy (Romany) legends about the Crucifix of the Lord Jesus Christ by pedro.

THE CROSS OF CHRIST 261
  THE CRUCIFIXION
  The Bellows
  From — MacDonald, a tinker woman, Castlebay, Barra
  After they had brought Christ to the cross they found that they had no
  nails to put into Him, and that neither had they bellows with which to
  blow the fire to heat the iron to make nails. There was no knowing under
  the white sun what to say or what to do in the confusion that was there.
  But the tinker woman lifted her skirt and blew the fire, and the iron was
  heated, and the tinker made the nails with which Christ was nailed to the
  tree of crucifixion. It was then that Jesus Christ the Son of the living and
  eternal God, up on the cross, said to the tinker woman down at the foot,
  * Thou and thy kind from generation to generation, from age to age,
  shall be walking the ways and travelling the wilderness, without rest of
  night, without peace of day, because of the work of thy hand and thine
  ill deed.'
  It is not right to aid evil nor to help in ill-doing even though we should
  be asked and though we could do it ; no, not at all (said the narrator).
  In consequence of the tinker woman's action, it is forbidden in the Isles
  to blow the fire with one's skirt or apron. It is also forbidden to turn the
  peat burning side upwards in the fire, for the smith who made the nails
  did so.
  The Whitesmith
  When Christ was being taken to the tree of crucifixion, in the hurry the
  black Jews forgot to provide themselves with nails. They went to the
  blacksmith and asked him to make nails to nail the hands and the feet
  of the Saviour to the cross. But the blacksmith refused to make nails for
  such a purpose. The Jews went to the whitesmith (tinsmith, tinker) and
  asked him to make nails to nail the hands and the feet of the Saviour to
  the cross. The whitesmith did the work as the Jews asked of him, and the
  hands and the feet of Christ the blessed Saviour were nailed to the tree of
  crucifixion. This is why the blacksmith is esteemed and honoured among
  men, while the whitesmith is contemned and despised, and this is why the
  race of the whitesmith is spread and scattered here and there throughout
  the great world.
  http://digital.nls.uk/early-gaelic-book-collections/pageturner.cfm?id=78430212&mode=transcription
https://youtu.be/VZR3Z6z1KfQ

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