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CHAPTER IV: Last DaysI never did learn drapery.

Invasion of privacy
Invasion of privacy
Invasion of privacy


A survey of beds in Pompeii and Herculaneum, excluding what are obviously children's cots, shows that Roman beds tended to be very narrow, even though married couples were expcted to spend the night together—for propriety's sake. I suppose one could push two beds together, but I prefer to think that Romans liked to spoon.

About the count: I never posted #3000, so I was able to roll it back by one today.

{{ The ARCHIVES live here }}

Exclamation points!

Date: 2007-11-28 10:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mealesbia.livejournal.com
Hey there! I've been reading for a while, but I just figured out the whole thing's here too so I can comment!
I adore Latin-- I studied it for six years. I even picked my username based of my love of Latin! (You get a prize if you guess which poem it's from! But not a very good prize.)
So naturally I love ancient Rome. I am also queer, which is pretty cool. And this is the first time I get to engage both of those loves at once!
So, this is me saying, thanks! Cute gay men in Rome! (Especially Menander, with his gorgeous lips, mm!)
The stunning story and art just make it better :) I mean, seriously, this is one of the most beautifully-executed webcomics I've seen, and look forward every page.
As for the volcano...my policy is, "what volcano?" ;)

Re: Exclamation points!

Date: 2007-11-28 11:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] serpentinthesun.livejournal.com
Re: your screen name. I'm a little bit embarrassed now because the first poem I thought of was Catullus 58, instead of Catullus 5--it is from 5, isn't it? My Catullus-fu is weak.

Anyway, hi Klio. I've been reading SPQR Blues for a few months now, since my girlfriend turned me on to it. Needless to say, I think it's great--especially the way you deal with the social interactions and mores (e.g., the whole "moral turpitude" thing) and all the details of Roman (Herculaneumian?) life. And, I squee over Mus and Menander. Is it ok if I friend you?

Re: Exclamation points!

Date: 2007-11-29 12:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mealesbia.livejournal.com
It is from 5! Vivamus, mea Lesbia, atque amemus...it was the first bit of Latin that I was able to read right through the first time I looked at it, without any help. Catullus was nice that way in general, but for whatever reason 5 clicked for me :)

Re: Exclamation points!

Date: 2007-11-29 01:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] meritahut.livejournal.com
Hi, thanks for leaving a comment, and I love friends, especially ones with any amount of Catullus-fu :)

My Catullus is horribly weak these days. I've spent so much time staring at ancient furniture and earrings and Herculaneumian architecture, I've been neglecting literature. Time to leap back in, I think....

Re: Exclamation points!

Date: 2007-11-29 02:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mealesbia.livejournal.com
At least you have a good reason!
I have completely abandoned the classics simply because I am in college now, and need to find a major which can lead...anywhere. (This is the same reason women's studies is out, alas).

(Also I'm not really sure if anything can be better than spending a whole year reading the Aeneid with my best friend.)

But SPQR Blues is an easy way for me to feel like I'm keeping in touch-- like I walk past Classics on my way to class, and we exchange pleasant small talk with a touch of nostalgia, and I can continue on my way without feeling like a bad friend.
Or maybe it's more like being Facebook friends with Classics. I watch them obsessively over the internet, and spend a lot of time thinking about Classics' personal life and drama, but never really do anything with them outside the internet.
It's a lot like being Facebook friends with Classics.
But I promise, if I had the "Top Friends" Facebook application, thanks to SPQRB, Classics would be #1!

Re: Exclamation points!

Date: 2007-11-29 02:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] meritahut.livejournal.com
Well... hm... careers... ::chin scratching commences:: Should you decide you want a career as an editor of any literary stripe, I highly recommend Classics as a major. Although, with your background, you probably already understand the structure and use of language in general pretty darned well. Of course you could always take a course on the side every now and then, right? Greek as a treat. A little Beowulf tossed in as well, maybe? Or, you could just keep reading the comic. That works for me :)

The course I took that combined women's studies and Classics should have been my favourite, but the professors were a little deranged. It led me to all sorts of nifty extracurricular reading, though.

One of my friends struggled through the Aeneid with me in class in high school, but I don't think she enjoyed it much. My main way of getting friends interested in Latin was to tell them elaborate stories about ancient Rome and use Latin in roleplaying game puzzles. They put up with my obsessions for some reason. Maybe they were waiting for me to get to the part of the story with all the wild Roman orgies XD

Re: Exclamation points!

Date: 2007-11-29 02:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] meritahut.livejournal.com
[livejournal.com profile] serpentinthesun beat me to the prize, but I'll brush up on my Catullus anyway :)

Thanks for stopping by to say hullo, thank you so much for compliments that will have me blushing all night, and I think I can promise a continuing big role for Menander... though I'm contractually obligated to mention that Felix will be in the story again somewhere, too :)

Volcano? I don't see any volcano. Just a pretty bay, some lovely cypress trees swaying in the breeze, maybe some birdies....

 

"There's nothing I enjoy as much as a jolly catastrophe"
—J. G. Ballard

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