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Mr and Mrs Rowland cutting the cake |
There have been other, very informative blogs this week about the whole history and tradition of wedding cakes from ancient Greek times onwards. They are well worth a read. I will just precis here. Originally they would have been made of bread (and you can see in the photograph above a bread wedding offering with a white ribbon that some friends brought back from Greece for us). Then 'bride cakes' as they were called went through a phase of being more like savoury pies in the 16th and 17th centuries before evolving into the sweet cake confections that have graced wedding receptions since Victorian times (below).
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cutting the cake at a Victorian wedding reception |
For a poem this week, I've chosen something by Naomi Shihab Nye, a Palestinian-American poet of considerable repute, and I've requested permission of the poet to reproduce 'Wedding Cake' here. It's from her 1998 collection, 'Fuel' (published by BOA Editions Ltd) and I recommend you to check her out.
Wedding Cake
Once on a plane
a woman asked me to hold her baby
and disappeared.
I figured it was safe,
our being on a plane and all.
How far could she go?
She returned one hour later,
having changed her clothes
and washed her hair.
I didn't recognize her.
By this time the baby
and I had examined
each other's necks.
We had cried a little.
I had a silver bracelet
and a watch.
Gold studs glittered
in the baby's ears.
She wore a tiny white dress
leafed with layers
like a wedding cake.
I did not want
to give her back.
The baby's curls coiled tightly
against her scalp,
another alphabet.
I read new new new.
My mother gets tired.
I'll chew your hand.
The baby left my skirt crumpled,
my lap aching.
Now I'm her secret guardian,
the little nub of dream
that rises slightly
but won't come clear.
As she grows,
as she feels ill at ease,
I'll bob my knee.
What will she forget?
Whom will she marry?
He'd better check with me.
I'll say once she flew
dressed like a cake
between two doilies of cloud.
She could slip the card into a pocket,
pull it out.
Already she knew the small finger
was funnier than the whole arm.
Naomi Shihab Nye
Thanks for reading, S ;-)
1 comments:
Sweet.
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