sienamystic: (hitman fetish)
sienamystic ([personal profile] sienamystic) wrote2005-03-15 09:13 am
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Atchoo, Atchoo, we all fall down

There's nothing like getting excited by a new, presumably well-researched book on the Black Death, settling down to read it, and immediately getting smacked with the "Ring Around The Rosy" is *totally* about the Black Death! Never mind that the rhyme's first appearance in print is about five centuries after said Black Death, which means that none of the other collectors of folklore, rhymes, and other children's circle games noticed it, but it was still popular enough to get handed down through the generations. And never mind the fact that there are a bunch of versions of it, most of which are obviously plague-free.

The author of the book is a good one, so I'm hoping that this was just a one-off oopsie. After all, we can't get our docents to stop telling visitors that "Good night, sleep tight" is a reference to rope beds.

In other news, I have perpetrated fic. A short Constantine one, to be exact. I'm just not sure if it's any good. It's sitting on my computer, blinking quietly at me, asking what I want to do with it.

[identity profile] sienamystic.livejournal.com 2005-03-15 03:36 pm (UTC)(link)
It was indeed Norman Cantor's In The Wake of the Plague, and I have put it aside temporarily in favor of Plagues and Peoples, which is much more densely and dryly written but seems to have just turned the corner and hooked me. I'll go back to the Cantor book, because he did write Inventing the Middle Ages, which is pretty impressive. He deserves at least another chance.

I'll cast another eye over the fic and then post it *g* I'm not an experienced fic'er, so I'll consider this my toe in the water!

[identity profile] decidedly.livejournal.com 2005-03-15 09:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Ah, you know of which I speak. ;) I think you'll find that Inventing the Middle Ages is far more satisfying. I dunno, I felt Plague wasn't all that interested in its own subject matter, you know what I mean? Sounds absurd, but the feeling plagued me (ha!) for the entire book.