As a new reporter for
The Sun, I was assigned to a human interest story about a man who was supposed to be the oldest person in his village and perhaps the oldest person in the world. I was intrigued to meet the gentleman, and happy to do the interview. When I was done I showed my editor my notes (which I had written on a napkin) of what the old man had said:
"How old am I? Let me add up the days."
"I ‘ave spent as many years as the days that fog covered the world.
I ‘ave lived as long as it took Tiberius to sail a parsec at sea.
For each of Nemo’s cables, a minute I 'ave endured.
As many years as Arthur N. Ford’s answer to the unknown.
I saw the long 'and pass by as often as the traveller circled the sun."
After seeing my notes my editor would not print the article until I could provide the old man’s age.
How old did he claim to be?
(In reply to
Possible answer by Dej Mar)
Leming, might you give a hint to who the traveller is? Other than the one I mentioned in my earlier post, the only other one I could recall was the Traveller that appeared in a couple of episodes of "Star Trek: The Next Generation"...speaking of which...
I ‘ave lived as long as it took Tiberius to sail a parsec at sea.
Tiberius may refer to the Mirror Universe version of Captain James T. Kirk. In the Star Trek multiverses. Travelling across parsecs was a somewhat commonplace occurance.
|
Posted by Dej Mar
on 2007-11-01 22:20:49 |