Classical Gas!

So, I mentioned our planned visit to the Classics Day at the British Museum last Saturday, the 15th, in the last post. Well, what a gas it was! Absolutely blown away by the four speakers and their presentations. Going up to London the previous day was an excellent decision, a leisurely stroll to the Museum being preferable to an anxious hour and a half on a train crowded with people going to the Trooping of the Colour! At the end of the day, it was also relaxing to walk back to the hotel rather than fight for a place on the train with the same people, and feeling pretty hungry too.

The first speaker was Richard Abdy, curator of Roman and Iron Age Age coins at the Museum who was also the Curator of the major exhibition ‘Legion: life in the Roman Army’. He was followed by Dr. Daisy Dunn, an award-winning classicist and author of seven books and still in her thirties! She is also a cultural columnist and critic. Her lecture was excellent, being about Homer and the Trojan War. Her decision to leave the photo of Brad Pitt in his warrior outfit up a little too long on the screen certainly pleased the women in the audience (and maybe a few men too). I have looked at a couple of her books and they look very good, very readable, which is something which cannot be said for some works on the Classical period. She’s one to watch out for.

BP Lecture Theatre at the British Museum. My photo 15/06/2024

Next was Prof. Ian Morris whose lecture was entitled ‘Killing people and breaking things: What were Roman legions for?’ My eight-year-old inner self loved it! Ian Morris is a lecturer at Stanford University in California and a Fellow of the British Academy. The quote of his title apparently came from US soldiers he spoke to when invited to a base and he asked them what they thought their army was for. They added that unlike other countries, they did not however ‘steal things’. Yes, maybe… His talk was equally impressive as you might expect. The day concluded with a lecture by Prof. Caroline Vout, professor of Classics at the University of Cambridge. She presented ideas about the interpretation of artwork from Ancient Rome and really opened our eyes to misinterpretations. She had a very stated speaking voice, one of those where the last word or two of a sentence is held back for dramatic effect. At times, maybe a little too affected, but an excellent talk which certainly has made me think twice about the mosaics in particular which I have seen.

There was of course the obligatory book-signing session during lunchtime but as all we struggling writers know, never turn down the chance to sell a copy! I had not heard of any of these four people before but I would certainly now buy Daisy’s books and probably Caroline’s. Ian Morris is renowned for ‘big history’, linking events from across the centuries, even millennia, I tend to go for more ‘period’ pieces unless I’m in the pub. But his discussion of ‘mob violence’ and the subtle difference between that and the violence of an army was fascinating. Not many people would expect a lecture on |Roman legions to include a description of the hooliganism of Manchester United supporters!

To top the day off, at lunchtime we went outside to eat sandwiches at the front of the Museum, the clouds blew away, and we had a great view of the fly past for Trooping of the Colour! The tourists coming out at the same time could not believe their luck. Just a shame our aeroplanes looked a little…well…just a little…in Russia or China or the US no doubt there would have been dozens of planes, ours did look a little too little.

So, if you are in the UK next year and interested in the Classical World, you might like to check out who they have speaking and attend. The event is organised by City Lit, a college based in London.

All quiet on my front

It really has been some time since I posted. But who wants to write yet more after trying to write another novel? And the discovery that a one-and-a-half hour train journey to London is quite ‘do-able’ has meant my attention switches to there rather than here. Visits to museums, art galleries, shops not available in a closing-down seaside town, and now lectures and courses at colleges and museums has taken up my time.

As a new member of the British Museum, I have been impressed with their courses and lectures and members’ tours. This coming Saturday we shall be attending their yearly Classics Day, three or four lectures by eminent historians and writers. With a 10.30 start and the Museum only opening at 10.00, we took the (expensive) decision to go up on the Friday and stay over until Sunday. A Saturday evening looming free in London, we were amazed how many theatre shows had tickets available at such a relatively late date. We have booked a visit to the Cambridge Theatre to see Matilda, having seen an exert on TV recently and been blown away by the young actors. So, what started as a spend on train fares and a Museum lecture has snowballed into a two-night hotel stay and a musical, with all the extra meals thrown in to the total. This third book had better be a bestseller!

The British Museum’s Classics Day is partly held through City Lit, a college sited just off the Strand near Charing Cross station. I had signed up to City Lit a year or so ago for some reason but had never been to any of their courses or watched one online. As I was signing up for the Museum’s day through the City Lit website I noticed a course on the archaeology of Southwark, an area along the south bank of the Thames and where I had created my imaginary theatre for my most recent books. Being outside the city walls in the 16th century, the area was outside the laws of the city and that is why the theatres, gambling houses, stews (brothels) and many taverns were established there, as others were to the north of the wall in Smithfield and Shoreditch. I couldn’t pass up the opportunity, and the coincidence, and went to it last Saturday. Starting a little later at 11.00, it was no hassle getting up to London on time, trains busy but no problem, everyone going out somewhere or on a journey and not worried about work…at least not many. An excellent day, nine people there, enough to get a mix of views and a chance to talk with all at some point. I am considering two or three other courses in June and July and then the college closes for August so will have to wait until September for more. Some courses last over several weeks, others form part of a qualification, but I think I will settle for a variety of one-day courses on any subject I’m attracted to…rail strikes and engineering works permitting…hmm.

City Lit, London. My photo 08/06/2024

What else? The third novel in what has become a series about the boy actor at this imaginary late 16th century London theatre is complete in its first draft and editing has started. It stalled several times so it will be interesting to see how it reads. I definitely brought in too many characters early on and will have to sacrifice or combine a few. These three seem to have covered approximately Spring, Summer and Autumn 1590 so I think another will have to move forward a year or so. A plague struck London around 1591/2 and the theatres had to close with the troupes going ‘on tour’ to avoid the disease and to make a living. It would make an interesting back-drop for another story. I also just recently got the idea of a biography of the main female character, a kind of woman who had to write under a man’s name and had to remain unnamed despite her important ideas and contributions. Whether she writes her autobiography or her husband writes her life or a modern-day historian does after stumbling on her papers, I have not decided, and it may never take off, it’s just a vague idea at present.

Whatever you’re doing in your life, remember never to stop learning – find a course or museum near you and discover new things. It will keep you young and may just stave off those terrible illnesses of old age.