starch factory maine 1280x720
Picture of sippicancottage

sippicancottage

A Man Who Has Nothing In Particular To Recommend Him Discusses All Sorts of Subjects at Random as Though He Knew Everything

I Want To Have The Only Blog With Three Deipnosophistae Entries

Mom never understood the bread.

I could see a little bit of
disappointment, a little at a time. It was like a ship appearing on the
horizon. It’s just a speck at first. You can’t know how big it is until
it gets close to shore. Mom was proud of me when I was young, because my
friends were all hanging out doing nothing on the corner — or worse —
and I was working like a man. But as the months turned to years, the
ship of her disappointment hove into view. The tonnage of it up close
was formidable.

Disappointment is not shame, nor anything like
it. She thought I could do more with myself, is all. Lawyer. Doctor.
General. Something where there would be a newspaper clipping or two she
could show to the neighbors. That’s my boy. That’s all she wanted. An affirmation.

But
the baguettes came out of that hot hole in the wall the first time, and
I was hooked. I was never allowed to do much except sweep the floor and carry the sacks of meal, but I knew right away. I knew I
could never get away from the smell of it, the wondrous feeling of the
flour on my hands, the heat like the sun on a rock at the beach all day
long.

I loved it; and so the fellows that did it with a grunt and
a sneer for money could never compete with me. They’d go home five
minutes early and grumble while I’d go by on my day off and help out and
smile. I am their lord and master now. By acclamation. Let him do it; he’ll do it anyway.
And the owner’s son, dissipated and snarling, didn’t last a month. I’m
the real son. I’ll save my little all and buy it when the old man goes;
or he’ll give it to me, because he wants his idea to keep going, and his
own boy has other ideas.

I bring it home and lay it on the
table, and Mom murmurs her grudging assent. A man decides for himself.
At least he’s a man, she thinks. And the bread is the food of angels;
but still.

Mom will have to go without, because many will never
ask why they raised a statue to me; it has to be enough that a few will
ask why they didn’t, when we are all gone. 

Deipnosophistae

I Want To Have The Only Blog With Two Deipnosophistae Entries

0 Responses

  1. I could see a statue of you, Sipp. But, it will be Modernist.

    Modernist means optimistic at it's base, you realize. But, I forgot; you'd be as happy without. The statue, I mean.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Thanks for commenting! Everyone's first comment is held for moderation.