Saturday, September 28, 2013

HOW BEER WAS DISCOVERED: THE TRUE MYTHOLOGY

HOW BEER WAS DISCOVERED: THE TRUE MYTHOLOGY
by Michael H. Brownstein
http://thecamelsaloon.blogspot.com/2013/09/how-beer-was-discovered-true-mythology.html

Pandora of Nubia, near the ivory trade route,
took possession of a grand ebony chest,
watched it with the eyes of a cheetah.

Somewhere within its thick walls
a secret stayed itself, and she could hear it,
now and then bumping into things.

She ignored it at first, or tried,
made promises to herself she knew she couldn't keep,
touched the wood with her palm,

played with the flimsy lock of grass and twig,
found herself admiring the grain with her fingertips.
Too much cat, the Shaman knew this to be true,

and bided her time from her grass covered home
overlooking the village near the great river.
There was something in the chest too great for her,

but not too great for Pandora with braided dark hair,
full lips and perfect skin—almost ebony black.
She was right, of course. Pandora was curious,

and it was curiosity that made her play with the lock,
break it open with an ah ha and a smile.
She opened the chest later that day,

let escape the demons the Shaman knew were inside,
thick fogs of madness and bitterness,
jealousy and selfishness, greed and contempt.

Pandora allowed them to sting her.
their noise intolerant and vulgar,
and then she peered into the shadow of the chest,

saw a round object corked and scented,
and pulled out a painted gourd
a vessel full of rich golden water,

a liquid with a smell she could not remember.
She drank from it.
It made her happy.

The painful stings left her skin,
she felt whole,
calm, able to see into her dreams.

Hope did not come with a fairy.
Hope came with Pandora’s gourd of beer—
a magic beer too easy to replicate.

The shaman went on to greatness,
made the best varieties,
and the people lined up to drink it.

Pandora kept the gourd in her home,
shared its contents with everyone,
especially those who wanted her to tell her story.

And then the Greeks came.

2 comments:

  1. Hello Michael,

    This is a great blog! I have enjoyed it thoroughly. I have noticed you have not mentioned the "ancient" model and by this I mean, what early Europeans writers had to say about the origins of Egypt. For example Herodotus stated very clearly that it was Kush/Ethiopia/"Nubia" that gave birth to Egypt in terms of governance and religion. He also seemed to think the same thing of the people of Sumer and Elam. Strabo also seemed to have a similar view. Also, there is a peer reviewed paper from 1921 by Dr. S. Langdon "The Early Chronology of Sumer and Egypt and the Similarities in Their Culture" which is very interesting, because he ties Sumerian religion to the Egyptian religion and he ties the language to Ethiopian. Though i am not sure what he meant by Ethiopian, as there was no country called Ethiopia that early. Could he have been referring to Kushitic language? History is so interesting and I think we are a far way off from fully understanding just how important and how powerful the Kushitic empire really was.

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