"True. I highly doubt I would be sent to keep a temple," said Hazrat, thinking of the training he had received from his mother on the road. "Being sent where I can be of service would be great, so long as it wasn't somewhere too quiet or remote, or I wasn't kept there for long." He munched on a rice cracker, letting his teeth grind it to mere crumbs.
Then, he took a gulp of tea to wash it down and the momentary worry passed. "Anyway, I don't know if you would call my sister's style 'travel poetry' exactly. Some elements are historical, while others are personal, and some just serve as a life lessons. She doesn't know I memorized this one - and you if you meet her you can
never tell - but since you requested..."
4d10o10k4, assuming an Average difficulty to recall something: 18
He begins to recite.
"My brother's gone away and not returned.
It is indeed an easy thing to leave
But coming back's the more demanding task.
Though horses kick each other, men should not.
'Tis true that strife twixt humans can flare up
As it is plain that even horses fight.
My brother to Mount Bailang you have gone
A thousand miles of distance far away.
Mount Lung how very far from me your heights!
Mount Ing how very cold to me your peaks!
There's no sign nowhere of my brother still
My heart is desolate and grows full sore."
"Oh, and that 'brother' isn't me," he quickly clarifies once he's done. "I mean, I've left home since that time, but it's not about me. It's one of the ones she based on an old story."
OOC:
With proper credit where it is due. Also, enjoy it while you can, because if it turns out that TN15 was too low then I'm going to replace it with a "less accurately remembered version."

Unicorn • Priest • Prodigy • Sage • Traveler • Exotic • Gullible • Lucky * Out Sick
Honor: What is Expected • Status: 1 • Glory: 1 • Topaz Points: 80 •
Profile
Gear: Unfashionable robes, Turban, Wakizashi, Scimitar, Lucky charm, Journal
Combat: Light Armor, Scimitar, Wakizashi
Speaking in Ujik
"If you are afraid, don't do it. If you do it, don’t be afraid."