The interest shown here by Borelli seemed to be excessive. To Phillip North, the guide seemed to be stating the obvious. He and most of the others drifted away.
âThe law of nature,' the Russian quoted, âis to act with the minimum of labourâ¦avoiding, so far as it is possible, inconveniences. It doesn't fight.'
An excellent illustration was the catenary droop of the ordinary clothesline; the one rigged up close to the wall had been completely missed by the others. With Borelli and Louisa, and Sheila remaining, the guide stood back admiring it.
âYou understand, it has reached a state of equilibrium with respect to gravity. What is called the principle of least action.' Shaking his head he seemed lost in admiration.
âThat's me,' Borelli breathed.
âIt is close to poetry,' the Russian agreed.
Louisa looked at Sheila and slowly rolled her eyes. Turning to her, Borelli took Louisa's necklace in his hand. He let it drop.
âThe principle is everywhere.'
âEveryone can see that.'
âBut we haven't properly considered it before; when you think about it.'
âOne could say that about everything,' Louisa shrugged.
The stocky Russian meanwhile was busily removing his coat and shirt. Hairily bare-chested he stood waiting as the others returned. With his coarse weather-tanned throat he suddenly looked old. On his stomach he had a few bullet and shrapnel scars.
âWe were talking about the laziness of nature, its line of least resistance.'
His enormous grave face; its poorly shaved folds. Holding his arms out horizontally he used his chin to point to the pale flesh under his arms which had dropped, pulled earthwards by gravity. âI am not a young man,' he said.
His breasts were sagging.
âI can hold twenty-cent pieces under mine,' Sasha told North airily. âI believe that's the test. I don't like this museum anyway.'
âShhh, you'll learn something.'
Gravity had ravaged the man's cheeks, pulling them to earth along with the flesh underneath his chin, letting air into his eyelids: the line of least resistance. As he put on his shirt again some found themselves frowning as they pinched their own chins.
âAnything,' the Russian quoted, âbecomes interesting if you look at it long enough.'
Remembering his job he suddenly mentioned neckties, although he himself was not wearing one. Well, their performance depends on gravity. He pointed to Gerald's. Borelli nodded, âAlmost entirely.'
âHa ha!' shouted Garry.
âHe's a real weirdo,' Sasha whispered. âWhat difference does it make! Darling, come along.'
Russians can be so bloody morbid.
âStay around,' said North, âand listen. Stop fidgeting.'
Gerald nodded. âIt's becoming interesting. Much of what he says we've simply overlooked. It's a new slant.'
Reconstructions: a brown boulder poised on a papier mâché hill, and towards the middle of the room a superb scale model of a shot-tower. However, these were abruptly overshadowed, as was everything they had previously seen, by the gallows a few paces to the right: standing black and waiting.
âHistory and gravity.'
âWow!'
Who said that? Garry Atlas.
They could see it was not a replica, not a reconstruction. The wooden steps were worn. Gerald poked around underneath the trapdoor, the black space for the kicking into
Ewigkeit
. Bumping into people, Kaddok manoeuvred to take a picture. How many people had ever seen real gallows! He called out for someone to stand on the platform.
âI will!' Garry volunteered, and for effect protruded his tongue and bulged his eyes.
âI wouldn't if I were you,' Hofmann advised.
The guide was watching them. âYou are like Americans and Canadians. You know very little. Nothing.'
âWe can sometimes be shrill,' said North alongside.
âWe often seem corny,' Borelli agreed.
âDo you still have capital punishment in the Soviet Union?' Hofmann called out, turning it back onto Russia. âCome on,' said Sasha, upset. âIt's an awful thing.'
âWhere's our Anna?' Mrs Cathcart asked. She went off labouring and elbowing up the slope.
âThis is Russia all right, eh?' Garry grinned.
âShut up,' said Violet.
âWe should all listen to him,' Gerald nodded. âThere's nothing wrong.'
The Centre must have known the effect produced by the gallows. The section following dealt briefly with Sport.
âYou realise, most games are a play with gravity; I draw your attention to gymnastics and ballsport especially. Proficiency is simply being best at counteracting gravity.'
He passed onto the various ways of âbeating gravity'. In pride of place of course stood a bust of Igor Sikorsky and a pair of tremendous grey blades from one of his choppers. Both the inevitable Sputnik and the mug shots of the first Soviet cosmonauts failed to interest them, which in itself was an interesting question, although according to Kaddok the dates given were wrong. Instead, a vaguely familiar lever trailing a piece of broken cable, lying in a glass case, caught their eye. They turned to the guide.
âHah! Handbrake taken from a Moskvich.'
For some reason Borelli burst out laughing. He apologised.
âI am sorry. It's unexpected there.'
The Russian stared at him but could see he was enjoying himself, learning.
Visually intriguing in their way was the assortment of lift-pumps; a vodka-still of intricate elegance; the fearsome stomach pump; a passenger lift in art nouveau style from one of the grand old St Petersburg hotelsâsoberly they âtested' it, standing in facing out, until Atlas began calling imaginary floors, as in a Myer emporium. In Russia it seemed Garry Atlas joked more than usual to show his independence. There was also a trapeze artist's stained tights.
All these were examples of man's attempts at defying, with varying degrees of success, the law of gravity.
Tatlin's resurrected glider was suspended from the ceiling, and a row of parachutes (history of) wafted in the breeze like anemones. A pleasure to stroll among these silken cords with the translucent carapace above; gradually they forgot the gallows.
Sasha leaned on North's shoulder.
The guide now began searching his pockets, announcing: âThis arrived only yesterday.'
He muttered a few words in Russian as they waited. That can be the trouble with museum guides. There was no way of knowing it was not, rather, part of a well-rehearsed act. For when he found the cable he held it at exaggerated arm's length.
âWho reads English?'
âViolet,' Sasha pointed. âShe's an actress. Use your best voice, darling.'
GRAVITY [she read]:
Palmeira dos Indios, Brazil, June 9
, REUTER
Violet cleared her throat.
The Mayor of this north-eastern Brazil city has desisted from his intent of mustering a majority in the city council to repeal the law of gravity, according to press reports. Mayor Minervo Pimentel was annoyed at the law of gravity because city engineers told him it prevented their building a water tank on the sloping main square of the city
.
When he called on the Council's majority leader Jaime Guimareas to muster the councilmen to repeal the law, he was told it was better to leave it alone
.
âWe do not know whether this is a municipal or state law and it might even be a federal law,' Guimareas said. âIt is better not to get mixed up in this business so as not to create any problems,' he added
.
Violet handed back the cable.
âYes, we went to Latin America,' Kaddok told him over the racket, the horse laughter. Slapping himself so much Garry had lost his footing on the floor and fell, keeping his cigarette in his mouth.
âVery interesting place. At the Equator weâ'
The Russian nodded without listening. Even he had to concentrate along this stretch of the floor.
Slowly raising his arm, to preserve balance, he shouted over Kaddok: âThe machinery which has sprung up around gravity. We have the hydrometer and the gravimeterâ¦'
Some like old Doug and Sheila, and Gwen Kaddok, tried squinting expressions, denoting interest and concentration, but once a person began grinning it seemed impossible to stop it. Residue from the telegram remained, and always would; contributing was the fun-park angle of the floor. Holding onto North's trouser belt, Sasha just couldn't stop giggling.
Stactometers (various sizes); and they slid past a village-built tribometer not noticing the ingenious system of greasy ratchets, the leaf-spring off a German army truck and the ballast drums of gravel suspended on frayed cables, attached to the face of an alarm clock. Leaning in the corner, a primitive jankerâwhat's that got to do with gravity?âand a collection of stuffed birds put to one side for the time being.
âI think they find such absurd things fascinating because their lives are grey,' said Violet in a clear voice.
âViolet, I think I agree with you,' said Gwen hanging onto Kaddok.
But they were subdued by the grave expression of the Russian. That large worn-out head; his unspeakable sadness. And he had a job to do. They were at the corner of the ballroom.
âThe purpose of the Centre,' said he tying it in a knot, âis to show gravity from every angle. The history of mankind is one of grave situations strung together like beads on a necklace'âhe attempted to smile at the simile. âGravity is the common thread. It can be observed both on the national and personal levels. We manage to keep going, nevertheless.'
The âgrave situations' were illustrated rather pedantically by photographs of war graves. Those in French soil, at Verdun, appeared like freshly planted geometric vineyardsâorder restored after chaos, as if to say it was all worth it; quite a contrast to the austere mounds like brown snow from the siege of Leningrad.
Disasters on a grand scale illustrated the ânational level', mentioned next: scenery after earthquakes, eruptions, plane crashes; the emaciated figures of famines and African plagues. Finally, the âpersonal level' was shown by photographs of people with long faces, grave expressions, chins resting on hands, widows weeping: culminating in an enlarged shot of a young woman, mouth open, arms high, leaping from a bridge.
âThat's Brunei's bridge at Bristol,' Gerald broke the silence. He turned to Phillip North. âRemember we saw that! One of the most important bridges in England.'
Remember too the high tide in the harbour; the Bristol zoo; the cold sausage rolls for afternoon tea?
âPeople are sometimes awful,' Sheila bit her lip. âI don't knowâ¦'
Putting her arm around her, Louisa moved her from the photographs. âNever mind. I always think it happens only to other people. We read the papers and we never seem to know the unfortunates.'
âI suppose so.'
âOur present theory,' the Russian rasped, âis that we dream in order to break away from gravity. In every dream, gravity is defied. Without such relief the pressure would be intolerable. I'âhe added in a queer personal noteââsleep badly.'
âIt must be awful,' Sasha murmured. She too had a vast surplus of sympathy.
âAh, but it's not worth losing any sleep over!' Louisa cried unexpectedly. Her husband laughed so harshly people turned.
âYou should leave her alone,' Borelli turned, staring at him.
Evidently such troubles were common in the museum, a by-product of the grave atmosphere, the concentrated force of the exhibits and the tiring slant of the floor, for the guide simply veered to the penultimate exhibit, the obligatory Soviet graph depicting the grave downward path of capitalism. Various economic measures were used. About to elaborate he stopped and craned towards the wall. He turned to them with a sigh, âWhich one of you?'
âWhat?'
Garry Atlas went over: he should not have laughed. âSomeone's written here “Down Under”. There's a small map of Australia drawn.'
âHurray!' cried Sasha, but was elbowed by North.
Garry turned back to the wall. âThis someone's really been busy. There's “Down with Gravity” and⦓Down with Communism.”'
The laughter fluttered, fell short.
The Russian stared.
âWhich one of you.'
âAy, come on. Fair go!'
âWhat's he saying?'
âYou're from down thereâ¦'
âHe can read English,' Violet declared, âwhen he wants to.'
âI think it's perfectly all right,' said Gwen. âIt's freedom of speech. We believe in freedom of speech, where we come from.'
âDon't say anything,' Hofmann advised. âEveryone shut up.'
âListen,' Garry faced the Russian, âwe didn't do this, if that's what you mean.'