'LER ABOUT TOWN Prehende tuam togam, vulsisti * Get your tongue around the lingo of love: Latin. Everyone's at it these days, says Gavanndra Hodge hen is a dead language not dead? When swaggering billionaire CEOs are quoting it at board meetings, fashionable new classes are sold out and celebrities are scrawling it all over their bodies. Mirabile dictu! Latin is back. As an early-adopting paella. I have long been aware of the life- and love-affuming benefits of the language of Caesar. For nearly a decade I have been attending a hedonistic salon of Latin speakers, all swanky graduates with MBAs and books published, where we indulge in the saucier gobbets of Ovid and Juvenal. I even had a I sc-themed birthday parry, attending as the great virgin, Diana the huntress. But my passion for Plutarch no longer seems so esoteric At the Idler Academy in Notting Hill, a new course run by the Latin mistress Miss Hislop and aided by parse master Harry Mount (whose memoir Arno, Ames, Amat.. And All That was a publishing sensation in 2006) was filled to the rafters with novitiates hoping to discipline their brains. Furthermore, your toga, you've pulled p legend has it that to celebrate the I Facebook user, the cool cats in Palo of all toga panics. Imagine the scent resplendent in a white sheet. pert n on either knee, the finest Budweiser a programmer doing something ern with a BlackBerry... But who could ham such decadence? My guess is Marcus himself, for although he may look like IT seeks, he listed Latin as one of his his Harvard application and has a fo Virgil. Which suggests that the richest has a wilder, more bacchanalian side would have us believe. For this, surely, is the reason for oar in Latin. Those crazy Romans just to party lots of wine, girls in flimsy anyone who has mistakenly flicked series Spartano: Blood and Sand Romans liked to do most of all was 'Remember that "Roma" is "amen' Something the Romans thems