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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!garnet.berkeley.edu!cozzlab
- From: cozzlab@garnet.berkeley.edu ()
- Newsgroups: rec.org.sca
- Subject: Re: peer structure
- Date: 23 Nov 1992 19:16:11 GMT
- Organization: University of California, Berkeley
- Lines: 100
- Message-ID: <1eralrINN7ne@agate.berkeley.edu>
- References: <9211211348.aa23645@mc.lcs.mit.edu> <atterlep.722474856@vela>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: garnet.berkeley.edu
-
- In article <atterlep.722474856@vela> atterlep@vela.acs.oakland.edu (Cardinal Ximenez) writes:
-
- > The explanation I've heard for this is that the SCA represents only the upper
- >class of a real medieval kingdom and that there are several hundred thousand
- >hypothetical peasants supporting us. ....
-
- All right, it's a nice slow day, I think I have time to post this.
-
- * * *
-
- My servant Radulf comes in every morning and lights the torches, and
- brings in the firewood and lights the kitchen fire.
-
- Then Guillem the Norman bard comes in and plays soft music to me
- to wake me up, and tells me the news of the day. I get up and dress and
- discuss with my housekeeper, Godgifu, what needs to be done that day. Then
- we walk two miles to church and hear Prime and Mass, and walk back.
-
- The laundry needs washing, so we haul it down to the washing well
- (less than a mile away) and there the washerwoman Gerda and her simpleton
- son wash the laundry in the stream and dry it by the fire. They don't do
- ironing, however, so Godgifu will have to do it when she gets time.
-
- Back home, old Kennald brings milk and eggs out of the dairy, and Rik
- the Swede, who just slaughtered a pig, brings in a loin of pork for tonight's
- meal and goes back out to make the rest of it into sausage.
-
- My husband Hal has gone out to the old mill-house with his little
- servant Argus Olympos to see if the pictures Argus painted last night have
- dried.
-
- Godgifu still hasn't gotten to the ironing, but she has washed the dishes
- and scrubbed the kitchen floor. The hearth is still grimy, but we have to bake
- today and pack the chests for traveling.
-
- Hal has come back. His carpenters Black and Decker have been making
- new chests; he looks them over and decides they're fit to travel today, but he
- will have to put the finish on them later himself.
-
- Godgifu sets Helga, the kitchen maid (only she stammers, so it comes
- out Kitchen Aid) to making pies. Helga isn't very bright, but she can beat
- batter to a froth and mix dough without tiring--you just have to watch her
- closely.
-
- Hal and Argos come in and it's time for the noonmeal. Godgifu blows
- up the coals Radulf left banked and we heat up some soup. We eat quickly
- because Godgifu has to go hover over Helga while she makes piecrust.
-
- We find some garments that need mending, and we rouse old Bertha
- the seamstress from her corner by the fire. Bertha is older than Godgifu and
- me put together, and she complains every time you ask her to move. Once
- you get her started she is tireless--until you take her eyes off her, and then
- she stops; she's as bad as Helga in that regard. Godgifu patiently watches her
- until she's done.
-
- Godgifu isn't as young as she used to be either, and my house is not
- even remotely up to my mother's standards--but you have to do what you
- can with what God gives.
-
- The chests still aren't packed and the ironing still isn't done, and Hal
- starts complaining about how late it is getting. Godgifu hunches her
- shoulders and puts on her impenetrable Saxon face and pretends she doesn't
- understand any Danish. Then she drags the iron and the ironing board into a
- corner and listens to Guillem's music while she sprinkles and irons, irons
- and folds. The chests get packed.
-
- The pies are done; the bread has come in from Akerman the baker;
- everyone in sight hauls chests and bags out to the road.
-
- We have a teamster named Volk who drives us everywhere we want
- to go. Unfortunately, his health is dicey, and whenever he falls ill we have
- to stay at home until he mends. He seems fit enough today, though, and Hal
- listens to his cough and thumps his back and tells him he's a fine fellow.
-
- The whole household falls to, packing chests into the wain. Their cloaks and
- bedrolls go on top, and everyone climbs in. Guillem settles down between
- Hal and Volk and starts telling them the latest gossip and whether it's likely
- to rain today. Godgifu and I settle into the opposite corner, I to read and
- she to mend hosen, and we're off. . . .
-
- * * *
-
- Perhaps you can figure out who most of these people are. Radulf is PG&E's
- mascot Reddy Kilowatt, for example, and Guillem the Norman bard is Bill
- the [Norwegian-American] deejay on the local classical station.
-
- But, you ask, who is Godgifu who gets all the real work done? Well,
- unfortunately, that's me ....
-
-
- (Yes, irons and ironing boards are period. Radulf, of course, takes care
- of keeping the iron hot.)
-
-
- Dorothea of Caer-Myrddin Dorothy J. Heydt
- Mists/Mists/West Albany CA
- Argent, a cross forme'e sable
-
- Disclaimer: This is the Cozzarelli Lab's account, not mine--but I don't
- think anybody else ever reads it.
-