Today Pegman takes us the the lovely island of Mauritius
‘What about this one?’
Atia surveyed the stone in her brother’s hand. She shook her head. ‘It must have a flat edge and a sharp point opposite.’ She looked up to the mountain. ‘You see? Like that.’
Felix looked, but the peak was wreathed in smoke, a lazy coronet often there on still days. He thought of his friend Cato who’d caught a beetle the day before, big as his palm, black as a thunder cloud with branched horns on its head like a stag.
‘I want to see the beetle, Atia.’ The sun was making him hot and whiney.
‘We must leave a stone for Venus -‘
The ground shifted under him, throwing him down. His knees hurt like bee stings. ‘Atia?’
She grabbed his hand, dragged him to his feet. ‘Run! Run to tata!’
The air stung, tasted bitter, dust filled his eyes, his mouth.
‘Lares help us!’
Written for What Pegman Saw, a prompt based on Google Streetview.
Of course, having a history degree that touched on the Classics, once I saw the smoky mountain top all I could think of was Vesuvius and what might have happened, had a brother and sister been out making offerings to the Gods on that day in AD 79.
Notes
Lares were household gods, small and personal ones, possibly guardian ancestors.
Venus was patroness of Pompeii, hence the children leaving a token for her.
It seems Roman children called their fathers tata as often as they did papa.
One last thing …
It’s thought Pompeii was engulfed by pyroclastic flow, a volcanic eruption where rock behaves more like water. To see what the Pompeiians might have seen before the end, see here.
And for the dormant Goth inside me still …
As ever, you capture the moment so vividly, Lynn.
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Thank you Tish. Eternally fascinating, this story, isn’t it? The tragedy of all of those people, caught in that moment of unbelievably powerful destruction. It will never lose its draw, I suspect. Thank you for reading 🙂
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Excellent vignette. I remember seeing a show where a villain changed his ways after seeing Pompeii. Something about a corpse in the midst of counting money moved him to begin valuing his life a bit more.
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You couldn’t help be moved by those corpses – or the shells of corpses I believe they are. Those moments of captured agony. Thanks for reading Josh 🙂
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Really takes me there. The lovely little details and strokes of character… You brought a whole place and time alive in 150 words. Bravo!
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Thank you Karen. Another lovely place from Pegman too 🙂
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What a terrifying little story, knowing how it ends when the children don’t, yet. And yes, now Pompeii is all I can think about too! Drat, I should have written mine first.
Thanks for posting the Siouxsie video — I love the song (of course!) but like so many songs from that era, I don’t think I’d ever seen the video. All those hours watching MTV, I don’t know how it’s possible, but it’s true.
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Ah, sorry for swaying your mind that way – it’s a pain when that happens, isn’t it? I love that song and the video. I still have the Tinderbox album it comes from and it is one of the best songs on it. I confess that was where I first heard of the Lares – Siouxsie mentions them in one of the verses. So much for a bit of Classical learning 🙂
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Hey, get your classical learning wherever it comes from! I didn’t realize at the time, but a lot of the 1980s bands included really interesting history and mythology and just generally more intellectual ideas in their lyrics than what came before or after. So you really could learn something from it. Or maybe I’m just not listening to the right contemporary music, I’m open to that interpretation too!
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I think you’re right – a lot of 80s musicians (especially the Indie ones) went to art school, were interested in history and art and so on. Hence Spandau Ballet’s name (a reference to hangings at Spandau Prison), Cabaret Voltaire (named after a Dadaist club in Switzerland), U2 (named after a spy plane) … There were plenty of bands who didn’t think that deeply (Bananarama anyone?) but many did
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Thanks for the explanation. I was a little confused about what I was reading at first, especially since my brain was “aimed” at Mauritius. Good depiction and in this case, a vain attempt to placate the gods.
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Yes, sorry, saw the grumbling crater and my brain fled to ancient Italy 🙂 Thanks for reading James
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Grumbling crater. Sounds like a grouchy old man.
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🙂
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Great description of the run-up to a terrifying event. I loved your ‘lazy coronet’. It’s possible the children escaped, if their tata was rich, and quick off the mark to the boats.
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Yes, I think so too Penny. Not every Pompeian died that day. Jus tas long as they didn;t hang around the harbour – apparently a lot of bodies were found down there. Thank you for the kind comment 🙂
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Brilliantly evoked, Lynn. And a terrifying video of pyroclastic flow.
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Yes, truly frightening isn’t it? It all happens so fast once the top goes. No surprise many of the residents of Pompei and Herculaneum didn’t react in time to save themselves. Thank you for the kind comment Chris
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Dear Lynn,
You are the mistress of description. You had me there in the moment. Really well done. I did appreciate the explanations at the end.
Once more I’m late for the Pegman Party. Hope you’ll swing by.
Shalom,
Rochelle
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Ah, thank you Rochelle! They could potentially carry a story all their own, those two I think. Thank you for reading 🙂
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wow -interesting history here = and that first video was riveting – also – the beetle as large as the palm – great descriptives
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Thank you so much -really kind of you 🙂
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🌈
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I went to Pompeii when I was sixteen. A fascinating place I would like to revisit. I enjoyed the fact that you told this in the children’s point of view. A normal day collecting giant beetles, whining and being too hot.
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Ah, thank you Alicia. Yes, catasclysmic events tend to happen when most of the world is just having an ordinary day, don’t they? Glad you thought that worked 🙂
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Yay! Siouxie and the Banshees – one of the true talents to emerge from the punk rock scene. Those were the days…
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I loved them. One of my favourite bands and I still own several albums. Although she’s a spiky one, I admired her for being a woman in control of her work and image in an industry where so many women are controlled.
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She beats our contemporary fake femmes fatale of the music industry hands down. Shame on them!
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Yep. And although she was very into image, she didn’t really sell her sex to promote the band – no getting her kit off and riding a wrecking ball in Siouxsie videos! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=My2FRPA3Gf8
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Thank you for that educational video – it was horrible 😉
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Yes, isn’t it? Shame she felt the need
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I have a difficult time conjuring up a much worse death than dying in an eruption or fleeing from one!
Good job.
Scott
Mine: https://kindredspirit23.wordpress.com/2017/10/22/tropical-paradise-what-pegman-saw/
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Yes, absolutely horrific, unimaginable. Thanks for reading Scott
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