Academy of American Poets
View Cart | Log In 
Subscribe | More Info 
Find a Poet or Poem
Advanced Search >
Want more poems?
Subscribe to our
Poem-A-Day emails.
FURTHER READING
Poems by Jeanne Marie Beaumont
Burning of the Three Fires
R.S.V.P.
Related Poems
At the Very Beginning
by Katie Peterson
Kitchen Maid with Supper at Emmaus, or The Mulata
by Natasha Trethewey
Poems about Kitchens
Artichoke
by Richard Foerster
Poems about the Past
Book Loaned to Tom Andrews
by Bobby C. Rogers
Evasive Action
by Charlie Smith
Imperatives
by Marilyn Buck
Last Century
by Wyatt Prunty
On Becoming a Poet in the 1950s
by Stephen Beal
The Ark Upon His Shoulders
by Forrest Gander
The Cold War [excerpt]
by Kathleen Ossip
The Hammock
by Li-Young Lee
The Past
by Michael Ryan
The Present Crisis
by James Russell Lowell
Sponsor a Poet Page | Add to Notebook | Email to Friend | Print

When I Am in the Kitchen

 
by Jeanne Marie Beaumont

I think about the past. I empty the ice-cube trays
crack crack cracking like bones, and I think
of decades of ice cubes and of John Cheever,
of Anne Sexton making cocktails, of decades
of cocktail parties, and it feels suddenly far
too lonely at my counter. Although I have on hooks
nearby the embroidered apron of my friend's
grandmother and one my mother made for me
for Christmas 30 years ago with gingham I had
coveted through my childhood. In my kitchen
I wield my great aunt's sturdy black-handled
soup ladle and spatula, and when I pull out
the drawer, like one in a morgue, I visit 
the silverware of my husband's grandparents.
We never met, but I place this in my mouth
every day and keep it polished out of duty.
In the cabinets I find my godmother's 
teapot, my mother's Cambridge glass goblets,
my mother-in-law's Franciscan plates, and here
is the cutting board my first husband parqueted
and two potholders I wove in grade school.
Oh the past is too much with me in the kitchen,
where I open the vintage metal recipe box,
robin's egg blue in its interior, to uncover
the card for Waffles, writ in my father's hand
reaching out from the grave to guide me
from the beginning, "sift and mix dry ingredients"
with his note that this makes "3 waffles in our
large pan" and around that our an unbearable
round stain—of egg yolk or melted butter?—
that once defined a world.









Copyright © 2010 by Jeanne Marie Beaumont. Used with permission of the author.
Larger TypeLarger Type | Home | Help | Contact Us | Privacy Policy Copyright © 1997 - 2013 by Academy of American Poets.