Second leg: Poitiers to Toulouse (with Job)
Last year my friend Donald Hirsch and I cycled from
Guildford Cathedral to Poitiers, using the Portsmouth to Ouistreham ferry. The account of that
ride is here –
https://sternfieldthoughts.blogspot.com/2024/07/a-pilgrimage-from-cathedral-of-holy.html
This year we took the same ferry, cycled to Caen, took the
train to Poitiers, and here we began the second leg of our journey.
To see our route for 2024 and 2025, please click here. Many
thanks to Donald.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kyRGN-YC8lxs29pJJwmcrQIzQ3ySiSE-/view?usp=drive_link
Day 1: Monday 28th April - Poitiers to Vivonne
Short and simple
‘As I have seen, those who plough iniquity…reap the same’
(Job 4: 8)
There was nothing onerous about getting to Poitiers. The
ride from the ferry to Caen was a breeze, the train ride, via Tours, smooth,
and once in Poitiers it was just fourteen-miles to the campsite. From the
railway station there was a longish hill to climb with traffic growling past us,
but soon we were out on a quiet French D road. Blissful. The campsite, by a
river, was virtually empty. The tent went up with no issues, our day ended well.
A naïve conclusion would be that this leg was going to be
hunky dory, just like last year. It wasn’t. Quick and easy conclusions are often
flawed. Like the answer of the friends to Job’s suffering. You must have
sinned, repent and all will be well. Short, simple, and wrong for Job.
Day 2: Tuesday 29th April Vivonne to Mansle
Google messed up
‘Have you not asked those who travel the roads’ (Job
21:29)’
As the first part of our quiet route was fiddly, Donald had
decided to use Google Maps. To begin with all was wonderful. We were on narrow,
empty roads. But then those narrow roads became farm-tracks, and our pace
slowed. Forty miles or so of farm-tracks was not going to work. We emerged on
to a minor road, came to cross-roads, and got the map out. We needed a gentle
road to the next town, Chaunay. As we were looking at the map an SUV drew up. A
well-dressed lady got out of her car with her map, the navigation meeting
became more intense, and a road was found. But then a cyclist arrived, an older
man, and he joined this meeting at the cross roads. He had another opinion. The
route the lady was suggesting would be problematic for us. There was a very
long hill to climb. He suggested another way, which we took.
We arrived in Chaunay later than we hoped for our coffee and
croissants, and outside the Tabac was Oliver, smoking in the sun. He had lived
in Northern Ireland and spoke good English. We nearly veered into one of those
‘Everything is terrible in the world’ conversations, but, thankfully, things
were steered to matters of faith. He was an artist, a free spirit, a Gnostic:
God is in everyone, he is God. I encouraged him to read John’s Gospel. He said
he would. Asked by Oliver about his faith, Donald said he was agnostic. As we
left, Donald had a riddle for me: why did silver separate him and Oliver? I
should have got it, but I have never had a close relationship with the Periodic
Table.
We cycled on down the quiet roads, soon arriving at the
small town of Civray on market day. A perfect place for our elevenses. We rode on
into the country side. All so good, so peaceful.
And then, a mile or so outside a small village, Donald had a
puncture. We walked to change the inner tube under the shade of the church. It
was the back tyre, so you have to lift the wheel quite high to get the wounded
inner tube over all the gears. We got the new one in, but then, as Donald set
off, there was a horrible noise. The chain was snarled up. Off the wheel came
again to sort that out. Now we needed a bike shop, to get another spare inner
tube, and, a new back tyre, because it looked a little worn out. This happened
at ‘Intersport’ in Ruffec.
After a rather hot afternoon ride, we arrived at our evening
destination, Mansle. As we entered the town, Donald let out a cry of
frustration. He had checked on the internet, but now a bill board announced that
the campsite was shut till May. A tent pitch is about ten Euros. No campsite
meant a hotel room, and all the eating places in the town were shut, so, it was
the hotel restaurant. All perfectly reasonable and decent, but a bit more than
ten Euros.
Google, let us down today. Job’s friends with their ‘only
sinners suffer’ mantra was like an AI chant. To this mantra Job counters that
the opposite is true: it is the wicked who do well. They prosper, live in
peace, and in death they are honoured. And then his sharp question: ‘Have you
not asked those who travel the roads?’
For our route this morning Google took us into fields, the
kind lady only knew what was good for cars – but the man who cycled the roads,
he knew.
Day 3 Wednesday 30th April: Mansle –
Chevanceaux
Things are not fixed
‘He who removes
mountains and they know it not…who shakes the earth out of it place…. if it is
not he, who then is it?’ (Job 9: 5, 6, 24)
After our hotel rest, we were on the road early in the
morning, full of energy. We made excellent progress, despite some longish
hills. By lunch we had already clocked up forty miles. According to the plan we
only had another ten miles to do.
It is easy to feel a little precious when you have worked out
a route, especially when changing it means finding new campsites. So I made my
suggestion gingerly. I was worried about Friday, when we were due to ride sixty
miles, with some stiff hills at the end. I suggested that we try and do at
least another fifteen miles or so today, to lessen the pressure on Friday.
Donald listened carefully and agreed – as long as there were campsites. There
were. Donald, quite rightly, likes to plan carefully. But he doesn’t lock himself
into a fixed system. He knows there has to be flexibility. So, the new plan
became official, and off we rode.
And then another slow puncture, this time it was Donald’s
front tyre. We managed to get to the town of Barbezieux, and Donald said he was
fine changing the inner tube by himself. So I went into the cool empty church
for my midday snooze. I was woken up by a rather distraught Donald calling out
my name. He couldn’t get the front wheel off. The thread had gone. That meant
he had to walk it to the bike shop which was about two miles away. He walked
fast, the bike shop found, the tyre was off, a new self-release clip put on,
and now the front tyre had a new inner tube. On paper this should have been the
last puncture for Donald’s bike.
It wasn’t. That’s why this leg wasn’t hunky dory plain
sailing. Donald had two more punctures. On the next day it was the back tyre –
again. Our conclusion was that the new inner tube had a dodgy valve. And the
day after it was the front wheel. That too needed a new tyre. Four days – each
day a puncture. And the bike had been in for a thorough service at Evans in
Guildford.
We prepared well for this ride. We practised. When I got a
pain in my left-hand calf muscle, I saw a physio, gave up tennis, and
religiously did his exercises. We got our bikes serviced at Evans, a cut above
Halfords. Donald had a plan A for the route, which, thankfully he wasn’t
precious about because he has travelled the roads.
Things seemed fixed – but they weren’t. Job’s friends tried
to push all of life into one fixed system. But Job understood that life is not
about a fixed system. We live in a world where God ‘removes mountains.’ It is
unpredictable, often wild, definitely dangerous and wholly impossible to pin
down. Just like the Creator.
Day 4 Thursday 1st May: Chevanceaux – Blasimon
No watch
Oh that you would…appoint me a set time and remember me
(Job 14:13)
Just as we were about to leave the campsite, which had cost
us a grand total of 8.60 Euros, I wanted to take note of the time. I looked at
my wrist. No watch. I must have left it in the wash area. No, it wasn’t there.
Nor was it in the shower. Nor was it where we had pitched out tent. So – it
must be in either my panniers or small rucksack. I would find out in the
evening when we unpacked.
The cycling was tiring today, with plenty of long hills; but
the scene of vineyards stretching wherever your eye looked was beautiful. Today
was especially quiet. For the French take May Day seriously, most shops and
cafes are shut. Thankfully we found a café open for our croissants and coffee,
and we managed to get our lunch from a supermarket. We should have got our
supper too, because by the time we got to our campsite, everything was closed.
We made do with a leftover roll from lunch, and a few nuts. We were both fine,
possibly because we had had such a fine lunch yesterday when Donald had a puncture.
Just by a bike shop there was a picturesque restaurant looking over the canal.
There we had a set three course lunch, served with a smile, costing I think
about 16 Euros. It eased the pain of yet another puncture.
Back to today. After getting the tent up and looking through
both my panniers I declared my watch officially lost. I was annoyed, but I also
wondered whether there was a message here. Perhaps a pilgrim should not be
measuring time. We had to travel in the daylight, our bodies told us when to
rest, our stomachs when to eat. There was no need for a watch. The need was to
take in what was happening all around me, to listen carefully in conversations
with Donald, to worship and pray when I dropped behind which often happened as
Donald was faster than me.
Surely there is a need also to see time in a less sliced up
way. For apart from Job’s early morning prayers, there is nothing in the rest
of the book about the time of day. We do not know whether his friends arrived
to see him in the morning or evening. It’s the same for their conversations,
even the arrival of God. The focus of the story is not on the time of day, but
a grander, more serious focus on what time means. So, Job wants God to hide him till his wrath is
past, and then ‘appoint me a set time, and remember me’. The time that matters
is that yearning for that ‘set time’, that encounter, that appointment, not
with a system, but with God.
Day 5
Friday 2nd May: Blasimon – Lac de damazon
An
unexpected event
‘Where were you when I laid the foundations of
the earth?’ (Job 38:4)
Our
goal was La Reole. This was where we would join the more than hundred-mile-long
Le Canal Garonne cycle path to Toulouse and say good-bye to hills for the rest
of our trip. We had our breakfast in Reole on some church steps, and then it
was downhill to the canal.
As I
sailed through the town, I looked back and there was no Donald. Where was he?
It had taken him a bit of time to get ready to move off after breakfast, but
now what was going on? He eventually appeared and thankfully I suppressed the mild
but rising irritation. For I was the reason for his delay. I had dropped my
sunglasses in the street and he had rescued them from the traffic. Patience is
always best for the pilgrim.
It is
impossible not to notice how well the French look after their country. As for
their small roads and villages, so for this canal path. Unlike the tow paths in
England which are often muddy and narrow, this was tarmacked, and wide. It was
cycling heaven.
Before
Reole, there were quite a few hills to climb. When I was going up one slowly I
felt a thud on my upper right arm. It was an unexpected event. And sudden. I
looked, and there was a messy red pear shape on my arm. I wiped it away, and
immediately knew this wasn’t blood. There was no smear. So, it was some sort of
juice.
Just
before I was hit, a car had passed. Perhaps one of the passengers had finished
their fruit and either decided just to throw it out, or, they aimed at me. The
latter is possible, for I was wearing a helmet with the union jack on it. This was
a joke Brexit birthday present from my brother. So – a nationalistic French man
or woman, already perhaps angry about English tourists, saw the perfect target
and took aim. I will never know for sure.
In
Chapter 38 God arrives out of a tornado and bombards Job with a hundred
questions, all seeking to show that Job did not know much and could not do much.
One of the first is the magnificent, ‘Where were you when I laid the
foundations of the earth?’ (38:4). His question to me if I started to fault His
Providence could be much more pedestrian: ‘Do you know why you were hit with
fruit when climbing that hill?’ We don’t know and the invitation from Job is to
trust that God does know what He is doing.
Day 6
Saturday 3rd May: Lac de Demazon – Moissac
God’s
cathedral and choir
‘Hear
this O Job, stop and consider the wondrous works of God’ (Job 37:14)
From
morning till early afternoon the wide gentle canal was our companion. The
sunlight played on the water, and there were often magnificent views, across
the flat fields to the hills in the distance. Standing guard along the banks of
the canal were mature London planes, their new spring leaves sprinkling shadow
over us. They were like the columns in a magnificent medieval cathedral.
We were
cycling from the cathedral of the Holy Spirit to the cathedral of the Holy
Family – through God’s vast cathedral of creation, the ‘wondrous works of God.’
And
both here on the canal and for nearly all of our journey the choir were with
us. The quietness of the French roads, and certainly this canal path, meant all
the birdsong was easy to hear. It was constant but varied. Sometimes it was
just a general chorus or tweeting and chirping, but every so often a soloist
would rise above this singing demanding our attention – a cuckoo, a woodpecker,
and others whose names I didn’t know. We were being encouraged.
Elihu,
the young man in Job’s story, is a difficult character. There is much to
dislike about him. He’s self-righteous, angry, pompous, dogmatic, and
long-winded. But, as with the other friends, he too has some gems, and one of
them is the appeal to ‘consider the wondrous works of God’. Cycling is surely
one of the best ways to do this, for we are constantly with creation. And,
beyond our thinking, the beauty feeds our souls with thankfulness and yes,
wonder.
Day 7 Sunday
4th May: Moissac
Loyalty
and kindness
He who
withholds kindness from a friend, forsakes the fear of the Almighty (Job 6:14)
This
was a day of Sabbath rest from cycling. I enjoyed the service at the Abbey. The
singing from the two hundred or so in the congregation was good, everyone knew
the liturgy, and the priest was full of smiles as he walked up and down the
aisle delivering is homily on John 21. You sensed his sincerity.
After
the service, a day of space and quiet. And a butterfly. In the afternoon, when
I was sitting by my tent, it came and fluttered around me, finally settling on
my arm. He or she was quite content there. Then the unnerving thought came that
perhaps this was God’s messenger about my imminent departure. As had happened
to the butterfly, we will all be changed in the twinkling of an eye. The
butterfly flew away. I am still here.
A
restful day for me. Not for Donald. Once we had planned our trip, his aunt
passed away and the date of the funeral was set for May 4th. Quite
rightly Donald wanted to be there, but he also wanted to finish this part of
the ride with me. Rather than blank either his family or the ride he went more
than the extra mile. On Saturday evening he got the train to Toulouse and flew
back to Stansted. He stayed in a hotel there, and then got the train on Sunday
morning to Guildford. From here he drove with his wife to Lewes for the
funeral, where he gave a eulogy. His cousins deeply appreciated his support.
Very early on Monday morning he drove to Heathrow and got an early flight to
Toulouse. It should have been a train back to Moissac, but there was a strike
on. So he got a taxi. All of this was not cheap, especially the taxi.
Donald would not talk about 'forsaking the fear of the Almighty', but here was kindness for his family and his friend . This pilgrimage has thrown up many incidents to learn from, this is surely
one of the most precious.
Day 8
Monday 5th May: Moissac – Toulouse, Job Street.
Rootedness
Then
came all his brothers and sisters…and ate bread with him (Job) in his house
(Job 42:11)
I
clapped as the taxi drove up the drive to the campsite, with a beaming Donald.
Rather than being tired from his early start, he was full of energy and
enthusiasm for what would just be five more hours of cycling. The bikes were
ready and we were soon breezing along by the canal for our forty-five-mile ride
to Toulouse. The beauty of the canal remained, but as we got nearer the city, the
surroundings became more commercial, the graffiti on the bridges more common,.
Soon we
were in busy streets. We were going to stay with an old university friend of
Donald’s, Professor Paul Seabright, who lived near the station. So we went
there first for a photo, and then we had a celebratory beer by the Basilica. The
second stage of our pilgrimage was over.
Paul’s
house was in 4 Rue Job. And near to it was a Rue Zacharias. So I assumed this
was an area where the council liked naming their streets after characters from
the Old Testament. Completely wrong. The street was named after a man who had done
well making cigarette papers. His initials were JB. And somehow an ‘O’ got
inserted.
With
its enclosed garden and large well lived in rooms, Paul’s home was an oasis. It
spoke of rootedness. This is where, after a season at Oxford and then
Cambridge, Paul had put down roots after being appointed the Professor of
Economics at Toulouse University. During our ride Donald and I had had a long
conversation about rootedness. Donald travels a lot, but he belongs to Guildford.
And that is an anchor for both his own family, and his wider family. I too have
put down roots in nearby Farncombe. And I hope our home, 45 Green Lane, is a place
of rest for our family. There has been some adventure and beauty about getting
on our bikes and heading off into the wide spaces of France with just a tent
and a sleeping bag, but that adventurous beauty is held firm by our homes and
families. We should treasure rootedness.
At the
start of the story, Job was established in ‘the land of Uz’. The vicious crash
comes, his wife tells him to curse God, he curses the day of his birth, the
friends come and harangue him - but he stays in his house. We would have
understood if he had moved. At the end of his story, in that same house, all is
restored to him, and his brothers and sisters come and eat with him. The
rootedness was there for the good times, the bad, and then the good again.
Moving would not have helped. That physical rootedness speaks of Job’s
spiritual rootedness. He never let go of the fact that God was Someone you
could talk to. Indeed, in Chapter 19 the dark clouds draw back for a few
seconds and we have the exquisite:
‘I know my Redeemer lives and at the last he
will stand upon the earth.
And
after my skin has been thus destroyed, yet in my flesh, I shall see God.’
The
next day Donald and I got our bikes into bike bags and flew back to London and,
fairly late on Tuesday evening, we put keys into our respective front doors. We
were home. Grateful for the cycling, very grateful for our homes.
Loved this account Tom. How boring it would have been if you had just said to 'We hopped onto our bikes every morning, the weather was fine we saw lovely places and we can't wait to do it again!'
ReplyDeleteTruly we never know what will happen to us on our many sorties and adventures, but how wonderful that the overarching protection of the Lord was with you. Those punctures could have happened in far more inaccessible and even dangerous places!
You help us to picture the scene so well. I love the Poitiers, Tours, Toulouse region, but I'm not familiar with the side roads that you visited. You helped to bring them alive.
I love the way you interwove verses from the book of Job, that you are so familiar with, into the narrative. Thank you. And then the greatest gift of all: rootedness.
May the Lord bless your resumption of homelife and ministry, and all your goings out and comings in! Robert
Thankl you so much Robert. Perhaps your second name should be Barnabas, the encourager. Glad you enjoyed the account.
DeleteNice summary of your adventure, I enjoyed reading about it. We need to plan a ride in the Uk. See you soon Michael
ReplyDelete