Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

  • Mood:

Poem: "Greasing the Wheels"

This is today's second freebie, courtesy of Dreamwidth user Ailelie, a new prompter.  It was inspired by a prompt from ellenmillion.  I got to thinking about baksheesh  and how Egyptians have a whole different view of bribery.  To them, it isn't corruption: it's lubrication.  It stands to reason that the Empire would see certain things the same way -- and the licensing fees may have evolved partly from this.


Greasing the Wheels


No one thinks what a millstone feels
Grinding the grain between the wheels.

No one thinks of a bureaucrat
Pushing papers so smooth and flat.

Think of what makes the world go 'round,
Keeping the wheels from making sound.

A little grease goes a long way;
So do the bribes that people pay.

It isn't fraud; it isn't graft;
It is the bureaucrat's true craft.

It's nothing but a little gain,
Greasing the wheels that grind the grain.

Tags: cyberfunded creativity, economics, fantasy, fishbowl, poem, poetry, reading, science fiction, writing
Subscribe

  • A Little Slice of Terramagne: YardMap

    Sadly the main program is dormant, but the YardMap concept is awesome, and many of its informative articles remain. YardMap was a citizen science…

  • Winterfest in July Bingo Card 7-1-21

    Here is my card for the Winterfest in July Bingo fest. It runs from July 1-30. Celebrate all the holidays and traditions of winter! ( See all my…

  • Bingo

    I have made bingo down the B, G, and O columns of my 6-1-21 card for the Cottoncandy Bingo fest. I also have one extra fill. B1 (caretaking) --…

  • Post a new comment

    Error

    default userpic

    Your IP address will be recorded 

    When you submit the form an invisible reCAPTCHA check will be performed.
    You must follow the Privacy Policy and Google Terms of use.
  • 5 comments
*giggle* <3
Perfect!
I'm glad you like it. I'll submit this to the Canon Board when I have time.
You know that medieval commoners tended to hate the miller - and avoid taking their grain to the mill, instead eating it as mash - because the miller was allowed to take some of the grain as his payment, right?
Sometimes. It depended on the country and time period, and the people, and their local customs. If they had a good relationship -- and weren't being nearly starved to death -- that arrangement worked out just fine. Other times, not so much, and the issue you pointed out wasn't the only one. Some millers would cut the flour with sawdust. That tended to get them ridden out of town on a rail if the villagers caught them, but it still happened.