Page 102 - Use Your Memory
P. 102

8  The  Roman Room  System







 The Romans were great inventors and practitioners of mnemonic
 techniques,  one  of their  most  popular being  the  Roman  Room.
 The Romans constructed such a system easily. They imagined the
 entrance  to their house  and their room and then filled the  room
 with  as  many objects  and  items  of furniture  as  they chose - each
 object and piece  of furniture  serving  as  a  link-image  onto which
 they attached the  things they wished to remember. The  Romans
 were  particularly  careful  not to  make  a  mental  rubbish  dump  of
 their room; precision and order (attributes of the  left side of your
 brain)  are  essential in this system.
 A  Roman  might,  for example,  have  constructed  his  imaginary
 entrance  and  room with  two  gigantic  pillars  at either  side  of the
 front door, a carved lion's head as his doorknob, and an exquisite
 Greek statue  on the  immediate  left as  he walked in.  Next to the
 statue might have been a flowering plant; next to the plant, a large
 sofa  covered  with  the  fur  of one  of the  animals  the  Roman  had
 hunted;  and,  in  front  of the  sofa,  a  large  marble  table  on which
 were placed goblets, a wine container, bowls of fruit, and so forth.
 Let's say that the Roman then wished to remember to buy a pair
 of sandals,  to  get his  sword  sharpened,  to  buy a  new  servant,  to
 tend to his grapevine, to polish his helmet, to talk to his child, and
 so on.  He would simply imagine the first pillar at the entrance of
 his  imaginary  room  festooned  with  thousands  of  sandals,  the
 leather polished and glistening,  and the  smell delighting his nos-
 trils;  he  would  imagine  sharpening his  sword  on  the  right-hand
 pillar, hearing the scraping as he did so, and feeling the blade as it
 became sharper and sharper; his servant he would imagine riding
 a roaring lion, while grapes he might remember by imagining his
 exquisite  statue  totally entwined with a grapevine  on which were
 luscious  grapes that he  could  imagine  seeing and  tasting so  well
 that  he  would  actually  salivate;  his  helmet  he  could  imagine  by
 substituting  the  container  of his  imaginary  flowering  plant  with
 the helmet itself; finally, he could imagine himself on his sofa, his
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