Awaken, oh daughter of Vesta
Your morning repast awaits.
Awaken, oh daughter of Vesta,
Come forth and learn your fate.
A lamp, cooked beans on a plate
Child of Vesta, it's much too late;
New mason's-work and water a-jugged.
Awaken, oh daughter of Vesta:
It's because of the soldier you hugged.
("Written" as an impromptu spoken poem to wake up Tamara for breakfast; started with the first line and it just grew. More-or-less historically-accurate, too.)
still feverish, huh?
ReplyDeleteActually, that's genius.
ReplyDeleteBut there probably should have been something in there about bacon. That would have worked a treat, I'm thinking.
Hell, I'm not 'that' coherent after TWO pots of coffee! Well done Lady!!!
ReplyDeleteVery nice. Now tell us more about Tam's "soldier," please.
ReplyDeleteWait a minute! Tam's going to be buried alive?
ReplyDeleteDoes this mean she's a Vestal Virgin?
ReplyDeletegfa
Aw jeez. You went there.
ReplyDeleteMore of a "keeper of the flame." Also, Rome's armies included the Navy and (one might suppose) Marines, so "soldier" is even less informative than it appears.
ReplyDeleteTam will bury herself in the covers if she is not minded to waken, which was the actual inspiration.
Ah.
ReplyDeleteIIRC, and FWIW, the Roman Marines were largely, if not entirely, freedmen.
(Pretty sure it was Tamara who first pointed me at the books about ancient Rome by Steven Dando-Collins. Good stuff!)
May I have permission to quote this?
ReplyDeleteSure, with attribution!
ReplyDeleteLucky soldier!
ReplyDelete