Yes, friends, don't talk to me about ancient Romans and the so-called grandeur of their empire and civilisation! Because at last archaeologists have lifted the lid on their corrupt society!!!
It's all in this morning's Onion News for East Hampshire - turn to page 94 !!!!
The swines!!!
And the story brings a rather inelegant smirk (!) to the face of Yours Truly this morning, here in semi-leafy Liphook, Hampshire, as I struggle to prepare for next Monday's fortnightly U3A "Intermediate Latin for Old Codgers" group meeting in nearby Haslemere, just over the county line in Surrey, as you do (!).
Yes, as per usual (!) it's me doing the real work today, hunched over our shiny new laptop, while my medium-to-long-suffering wife Lois has all the fun (!), larking about, making our annual Christmas cake, would you believe! Only kidding, Lois, by the way, if you're reading this haha!!!!!
flashback to this morning: me hunched over our shiny new laptop, trying to make
sense of a 2000-year-old bit of Latin - Sallust's account of the Catiline Conspiracy,
in which disgruntled nobleman Catiline tried to take over the Roman state by force
...while my wife Lois has all the fun of making this year's Christmas Cake - no fair !!!!!!
And if you look carefully at those pictures of Lois (above), you'll see, through our patio doors, the piteous figure of our gardener Matthew, in his bobble hat and red anorak, toiling away in our tiny, rain-sodden back garden, weeding our flower beds for us.
Poor Matthew!!!!!
There are some compensations for me this morning, however, when I read historian Sallust's 2000-year-old account of the "conspiracy" of Catiline. Essentially Catiline was seeking to overthrow the Roman state by recruiting a rag-tag army of disgruntled aristocrats and urban poor, and (as he hoped) making him Emperor, as you do (again) !!!!
Yes, Sallust says that Catiline corrupted a group of young followers
"by teaching them various forms of wickedness", and it seems that Catiline must have really 'studied' wickedness and defined its 'various forms', although as far as it's known he never wrote it up, or if he did, his analysis was sadly lost - a pity!
(left) the Roman historian Sallust, and (right) the hero of his book, the Roman rebel
Catiline, here addressing his rag-tag army of disgruntled aristocrats
Catiline was also, however, certainly a good judge of people, because in recruiting his rag-tag army he offered the right bribe for each recruit, based on their personality. Sallust says in his account of Catiline's revolt, he offered some of his potential young recruits "girlfriends" or "mistresses" [Latin: amicas], whereas to others, he offered "dogs and horses" [Latin: canes atque equos], sparing no expense [Latin: neque sumptui.. pepercit].
Lois suggests that those disgruntled young recruits, the ones that Catiline offered girlfriends to, could have been 'incels' (= involuntary celibates), whereas the others, the ones who got dogs and horses bought for them, could have been animal-lovers.
I wonder......!
20:00 What a day, though - busy busy busy, yet again! And despite afternoon nap-time, Lois and I are pretty tired by evening, and ready to "veg out" on the sofa, and watch some restful 'fare' on our little "telly". Well, we are going to be 80 next year, would you believe, even though we're both unquestionably "marvellous for our age" haha!
So we turn to Channel 5 for yet another programme about the "Secrets of the Royal Palaces" - what madness, isn't it!!!!!
One thing Lois and I have learnt from this marathon series, is that, in medieval times, it was always best to obey your monarch, especially if you're his/her maid of honour, to put it mildly!!! And in tonight's programme, the year is 1560, and Elizabeth I, the Virgin Queen, is getting nervous about any threats to her right to the throne.
The monarch's maids of honour were supposed to be virgins, but one of Elizabeth's maids of honour, her cousin Katherine Grey, starting breaking the rules - oh dear! In tonight's programme, historian Katherine Williams tells the story:
Eventually the inevitable happens - Katherine gets pregnant, and, because she's the Queen's cousin, this is a big threat, especially if the baby turns out to be a boy. Alarmed at the threat to the succession, Elizabeth throws Katherine into the Tower of London, and when Ned comes back from a trip to Europe, he gets thrown into the Tower too.
What madness !!!!!
But wait there's more. Now with the couple both in the Tower, and locked in rooms just 10 feet apart, an obliging jailer agrees to open the doors to their rooms, so that Ned can slip into Katherine's room at night.
What a crazy world they lived in, back in those far-off days !!!!!
21:00 We decide to go to bed on something a bit more "cultural" (!) - a new series on the Sky Arts Channel offering fascinating analyses of some of the UK's favourite Christmas films.
And if YOU have seen the Muppet Christmas Carol (1992), I can guarantee that the following is the iconic, heart-rending scene, where Scrooge's accountants, led by Kermit the Frog, are complaining to Scrooge about the cold in their office - that's the scene that's stuck in YOUR brain, like it has in mine and Lois's, that's for sure!
Am I right, or am I right!!!
And did YOU shed a tear when Scrooge, played brilliantly by Cockney film-star Michael Caine, gave this heartless answer to his poor, freezing staff?
Caine's performance as Scrooge in the film has rightly been lauded by the critics, which pleases me particularly, as I'm always being mistaken for Caine in the street - and you can see why. The resemblance was astonishing, even when we were both young men, struggling to get our feet on the first rung of "the ladder of life"!
lookalike: (left) Cockney film-star Michael Caine, and (right) Yours Truly
I think you'll agree that the resemblance is uncanny!
And now we're both old, but we're still look like twins, which is nice!
And in tonight's programme, Caine talks candidly, perhaps for the first time, about how old age can sometimes be a blessing.
Haha! Well, we all had a jolly good laugh over that, didn't we! [Speak for yourself! - Ed].
But there's a serious point here as well, isn't there. Did YOU notice how, when the Oscars came round, it was Caine who was being touted as a possible winner, and not any of the muppets themselves, which was a bit of an outrage.
Will puppets be the last "minority" group in our society to get the respect they deserve?
I wonder......!
Will this do?
[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]
22:00 We go to bed - zzzzzzzz!!!!!!