When I mix up dough I become the mother
of fermented yeast and fresh wheat
rising in my kitchen overnight.
I bring forth loaves from my hands,
breasts and loins.
The next day loaves bake on hot stone
the aroma fills the house.
I am the midwife bringing forth the golden babies
tapping the bottom of each
listening for the hollow sound of being done.
I arrive at a dinner party with my newborn
still warm, wrapped in a blanket.
The hostess becomes shaken, frightened of her own infertility.
She snatches the bread from my arms
and burns my child in the oven.
She produces a pale impostor
made by robots on some distant planet,
something her children will prefer, she assures me.
But her children delight in the slicing and eating of a warm
homemade loaf smeared with fresh butter.
Even a naked slice is good.
There has never been a child who didn't love my bread.
-Emily Lisker 12/2/09
Wednesday, December 02, 2009
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1 comment:
bread/butter: what's not to love. it is poetry in consumption.
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