PICTURE CLUB [ Pictures & fun ]
May 27, 2017 10:21:16 GMT -5
Post by Deleted on May 27, 2017 10:21:16 GMT -5
May 26, 2017 17:14:37 GMT -5 @hunnu said:
All my Hunnic brothers told me not to get involved with a Sarmatian.I paid no heed to my tribesman or shaman.
I was seduced by our shared interest of battles, raids and horses.
This led to small talk about vanquishing our foes and looting their resources.
She looked real fine
on the the bus 59.
We were on our way on this fine stallion to the station of Waterloo
lookin' out of the window at the London Eye, admiring the view.
I did not listen to my Hunnic brothers
they told me Sarmatian women cannot be compared to others.
Her smile and cheek bones were divine
I threw her over my shoulder and made her mine.
I took her to my yurt
and thought she was a sort.
As I caressed her flowing hair
She gazed at me with an azure eyed stare.
I embraced her lithe body with zest,
her claws shredded my deel revealing my battle-scarred chest.
A night I will not forget filled full of barbaric thrust,
two bodies entwined in Hunnic-Sarmation lust.
I got up with a massive grin the next day,
she was gone, I secretly longed her to stay.
Where are you now my Sarmatian woman of Amazon?
Why did you leave me in such torment all alone?
In south London, whenever I see a 59 Bus
I remember in life there coulda been an us.
In my mind's eye I see you crushing your enemies astride your stallion,
Fortunately, I have forgotten about you now, I just met a Maiden, a beautiful Cimmerian.
The existence of Sarmatian warrior women are a historical fact are they not? Not sure as to the authenticity of that research. What do you think of the possible Sarmatian link to the legend of King Arthur? I read somewhere that the notion of the sword in the stone, or the sword in the mound, comes or may have come originally from sarmatian legendry/folklore.
The Alans according to The Roman History of Ammianus Marcellinus, written in the later half of the 4th century:
'... No temple or sacred place is to be seen in their country, not even a hut thatched with straw can be discerned anywhere, but after the manner of barbarians a naked sword is fixed in the ground and they reverently worship it as their god of war, the presiding deity of those lands over which they range. '
Maybe the Alans inherited a similar custom from the Sarmatians?