When you first became interested in Classics, did you have certain goals? Perhaps you dreamt of reading Homer in the original Greek? Or of learning to scan lines of Virgil? Did you hope your Classics degree might give you a grasp of Greek philosophy or insight into Roman politics? Did you imagine yourself doing certain things? Wandering ancient ruins in the shimmering heat of the Mediterranean sun? Drinking retsina under a grape arbour at dusk on the coast of some island? Swimming in the same dark waters sailed by Odysseus and Cleopatra?
How many of those dreams and goals have you realised? Maybe it's time to take stock. To ponder which can be ticked off a list and which can stay on. When I was thinking about this talk, I sent out a tweet asking Classicists what goals they still had. 80% of the answers were intellectual: e.g. to memorise a speech, learn a language, grasp a concept. Only 20% had to do with physical activity, usually a pilgrimage to some ancient site or trek along some famous road. We Classicists exist so much in our heads that I thought I would make most of the items on my list about the physical tasks rather than mental goals. My aim with this list of suggestions is to encourage you to use all five senses to reconnect with your original dreams and goals, so you can be inspired and inspire others.
1.
MEMORISE A PASSAGE - Learning something by heart is a precious thing. Memorise a
speech or poem in Latin, Greek or Hebrew. Not only will you inspire your students, you will have something to recite when you find yourself in an
ancient Greek theatre with those famously excellent acoustics. And a speech or poem is always more impressive than
saying testing one two three when
you’re trying out a microphone. Best of all, the passage becomes part of you. Tip: Recite it every morning while doing
your push ups and crunches.
my kylix from the Vatican giftshop |
my replica strigil and oil flask |
3. TAKE YOUR STRIGIL TO THE BATHS - In
Rome last year, I met two experts on ancient Roman thermae or
baths. Neither one of them had ever been to a hammam or public bathhouse of any kind! How can you study Roman baths without ever trying out the nearest thing? A trip to a Turkish bath or hammam can be a sensory revelation. In a hammam in the old town of Fez, I once saw a boy shovelling
sawdust into the underfloor
furnace, just like a Roman hypocaust. I went to another Fez hammam at night and the electric lights glowed in the steam like oil-lamps. I almost fainted after the hot room because I got up too fast. With its cream and apricot marble and dome pierced with elaborate steam vents, Cağaloğlu Hamamı in
Istanbul is so opulent that a visit makes you feel like a Roman emperor or empress. Tip: You don't have to go to Morocco or Turkey, there is a Roman Bath in Bayswater with rooms marked tepidarium, caldarium and laconicum. Take a flask of oil and your replica strigil to the Porchester Spa.
Man on Market Street, San Francisco |
4. TRY CUPPING - Cupping
teaches you about the four humours, one of the ancient mindsets we've forgotten. The cupping instrument was such a common aspect of Greek and Roman life that doctors often hung replica ones outside their surgeries or put reliefs of them on their tombs. But many classicists wouldn't know a cupping vessel if they saw it. Cupping was designed to balance the humours bringing you back to health and stability. Reading Book VI of the Iliad, I suddenly realised that
Hector is melancholy by nature and Paris – likened to a leaping stallion – is
sanguine. Tip: Your local Chinese doctor or Acupuncture technician can do dry or wet cupping.
Chris Lydamore |
The Cambridge Greek play in 2013 |
with Andrew Ashmore |
Ben Kane walks for charity |
Ostia Antica, numinous and magical |
Santa Lucia fishing village in Naples |
Puy du Fou near Nîmes in France |
The Amber Fury |
12. WRITE A NOVEL OR SCREENPLAY - As a Classicist, you
have enough insight and knowledge to write a book. Maybe you will write the next Eagle of the Ninth or The Last of the Wine. It could be a child’s picture
book about the Trojan Horse, your own translation of Catullus' Love Poetry, or a tongue-in-cheek re-telling of Homer's Odyssey in
the style of The Diary of A Wimpy Kid... Oh wait! That's been done. Classicist Natalie Haynes has
recently written a contemporary novel based on a Greek tragedy
template: The Amber Fury. Or, if a novel doesn't appeal, You could write a screenplay based on a updated Greek myth or re-telling of a fascinating incident from history. I am currently kicking myself that I didn't think of Ruby Sparks, the Pygmalion story from a writer's point of view, or Mark Wahlberg's upcoming The Roman, a filmed version of teenage Julius Caesar's abduction by pirates. If you're really ambitious, why not map out a whole TV series about Theseus or Hadrian? Tip: Find a good story structure method, like Save the Cat.
So those are my dozen suggestions of things you might want to do before you KICK THE BUCKET. If you don't like them, come up with your own!
So those are my dozen suggestions of things you might want to do before you KICK THE BUCKET. If you don't like them, come up with your own!
Tweet
me @CarolineLawrenc to let me know how you get on. Or leave your suggestions in the comments section below. Bona fortuna!
Good luck!
P.S. My personal bucket list:
1. To memorise twenty lines of Homer's Iliad
3. Take a pottery class and make a Geometric cup
4. Take part in a real Roman banquet, reclining on couches
5. Watch a Roman pantomime (or something close to it)
6. Climb Mount Vesuvius to the crater
7. Spend the night among the ruins of Troy
8. Visit Jerusalem
9. Witness a chariot race at Puys du Fou
10. Write an HBO television adaptation of the Aeneid
[This post is based on my presidential address at the JACT AGM and conference in May 2014.]
[This post is based on my presidential address at the JACT AGM and conference in May 2014.]
I love all these ideas and am blessed to have done a number of them. I would like to visit a proper Roman style bath house (the hamman was fun but not quite right!) followed by a reclining feast, complete with doormice and servants (but no vomiting!) I'd also like to ride a chariot and sail on a trireme - do I ask too much?
ReplyDeleteNo, you don't ask too much. As Horace said: Carpe diem! :-)
DeleteOf course I can agree with visiting Naples! Did you go into Castel dell'Ovo itself? Like any major city of history there are boring mundane parts, but also areas rich with interest.
ReplyDeleteYes, we loved Castel dell'Ovo. Also Virgil's tomb. Are there boring parts of Naples? ;-)
DeleteI would love to go to a hammam or - especially - a chariot race, that would be so cool!
ReplyDeleteThose in southern England wanting to see a Greek Play could also visit the Bradfield College production later this month:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.bradfieldcollege.org.uk/News/NewsPages/Documents/Antigone%20at%20Bradfield%20June%202014.pdf
Thanks! Here's another link to buy tickets: Antigone Box Office
DeleteWell, mine is to ride in the hoofprints of Alexander the Great from Macedonia to India - have no idea when it will become possible, though. (No horse, for one thing...)
ReplyDeleteThe chariot race in Number 11 sounds cool, too. (If you go, can I come with you? (Maybe I'll find that horse!)
Sounds good, Katherine! Allons-y!
DeleteLots of museums and excavations on my list, and translating something classic. Though when I went into classics, all I ever thought about was: would I like to do Greek and Latin all day every day? And the answer was: yes, sounds like fun!
ReplyDeleteOh, and walking Hadrian's wall!
ReplyDeleteHilarious! Good luck with your own bucket list, maybe you can give us a monologue of Homer's Illiad?
ReplyDelete