Thursday
Aug. 15, 2002
The Iceberg Theory
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Poem: "The Iceberg Theory," by Gerald Locklin from The Iceberg Theory (The Lummox Press).
The Iceberg Theory
all the food critics hate iceberg lettuce.
you'd think romaine was descended from
orpheus's laurel wreath,
you'd think raw spinach had all the nutritional
benefits attributed to it by popeye,
not to mention aesthetic subtleties worthy of
veriaine and debussy.
they'll even salivate over chopped red cabbage
just to disparage poor old mr. iceberg lettuce.
I guess the problem is
it's just too common for them.
It doesn't matter that it tastes good,
has a satisfying crunchy texture,
holds its freshness
and has crevices for the dressing,
whereas the darker, leafier varieties
are often bitter, gritty, and flat.
It just isn't different enough and
it's too goddamn american.
of course a critic has to criticize;
a critic has to have something to say
perhaps that's why literary critics
purport to find interesting
so much contemporary poetry
that just bores the shit out of me.
at any rate, I really enjoy a salad
with plenty of chunky iceberg lettuce,
the more the merrier,
drenched in an Italian or roquefort dressing.
and the poems I enjoy are those I don't have
to pretend that I'm enjoying.
Today is celebrated as the Feast
of the Assumption, a holy day of obligation for Catholics. The celebration
of Mary being taken, body and soul, into heaven has been observed since the
7th century in Rome.
On this day in 1947, the Indian sub-continent won independence from Britain
after being a colony for 200 years. Mohandas Gandhi, one of the most vehement
champions of independence, declared his life a failure because India could not
govern itself as one state but gave in to division-one nation primarily for
Hindus (India), and another for Muslims (Pakistan).
It's the birthday of Julia
Child, born in Pasadena, California (1912). She joined the O.S.S. during
WWII, where she met Paul Child, who became her husband. He was an enthusiastic
gourmet, and got her interested in foreign food. They were posted to Paris,
where it was his interest in French food that prompted her to learn how to prepare
it. She took classes at the Cordon Bleu cooking school, then studied privately
with chef Max Bugnard. With two friends, chefs Simone Beck and Louise Bertholle,
she set up a cooking school called L'École des Trois Gourmandes, and
wrote the best-selling book Mastering the Art of French Cooking (1961).
It's the birthday of "Lawrence of Arabia," T(homas)
E(dward) Lawrence, born in Tremadoc, North Wales (1888). He wrote Seven
Pillars of Wisdom (1926), "the last great romantic war book,"
shortly after WWI, describing the Arab revolt and his glorious part in it.
It's the birthday of novelist Edna
Ferber, born in Kalamazoo, Michigan (1887). She wrote sprawling sagas:
So Big (1924-Pulitzer Prize winner); Show Boat (1926), which was
made into a hugely popular musical; and Giant (1952). Edna Ferber said,
"A woman can look both moral and exciting, if she also looks as if it were
quite a struggle."
It's the birthday of novelist Sir
Walter Scott, born in Edinburgh (1771), credited with inventing the
historical novel. He began by writing narrative poems such as "The Lady
of the Lake" (1810), then tried novels, starting with Waverley,
which he published anonymously for fear of staining his "literary"
reputation. When Waverley proved a sensation, he followed it, under his
own name, with Rob Roy (1818), Ivanhoe (1819), and many more.
"But no one shall find me rowing against the stream .
I care not
who knows it-I write for the general amusement."
Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.®