I disagree.
I disagree.
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Though they do have that nice spicy scent, akin to incense you'd smell at a Catholic Church, there is defo a hint of dry rot.
The intoxicating bouquet of ancient microbes you have no immunity to.
3 0 ReplyI was going to eat that mummy! 😠
5 0 Reply3 0 Reply
The British urge to eat mummies still going strong
79 0 ReplyWell, they were eaten as medicine for centuries. Not to mention as a paint and possibly for fires...
2 0 ReplyCat mummies have been used as fertilizer too.
1 0 Reply
My god this is an outrage, I was going to eat that mummy! Fry has got to go!
16 0 ReplyDescribed by William Dampier, a 17th-century British pirate as "extraordinary large and fat, and so sweet, that no pullet eats more pleasantly".
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I don't mind the sun sometimes, the hieroglyphs it shows,
I can taste you on my lips and smell you in my gauze,
Cinnamon and sugary and softly mummified,
You never know just how to look through the all-seeing Horus eye.
16 0 ReplyHow do they feel when you roll them under your tongue?
15 0 ReplySmooth.
12 0 Reply
Do not leave archeologists or geologists alone with a mummy.
10 0 ReplyOr any kind of Englishman.
11 0 Reply
Oh good, I was worried.
5 0 ReplyWell and good but how is Kasparov and his lilac marigolds anything to do with it.
1 0 ReplyCan I get this as a perfume? Maybe Axe could do a thing?
3 0 ReplyRelevant Smithsonian article.
I’d probably skip on the animal fat and bitumen, but cedar, juniper, and cypress all smell pretty good.
Apparently the scent could also vary slightly depending on who was being embalmed.
3 0 Replyi dunno, musky scents like that do have their place in the perfume world, in moderation.
1 0 Reply
Axe: Spicy Pharaoh
3 0 Reply