
The Book of Love was written before the worlds were made. If you don’t believe it, just read more Yeats. We are made to read much Yeats here.
blog queen said...
Ah, I have one. What is it like to be a boy/man in love? I've wondered lately. We girls get all giddy, look starry eyed, feel weak in the knees when kissed, etc. I've wondered if boys and men feel the same or is it different for them? I read also that usually one of the couple is "more in love" with the other, and saw this played out today at McDonalds. I saw a chap with his arm around a girl looking totally besotted. Giving rise to the above questions in my mind. She on the other hand looked like she was just tolerating his being there and was more in love with the ice cream cone she was holding. I was thinking, poor chap, she's probably going to dump him sometime... but anyhow, do boys/men go all gagga like girls/women do when they are first "in love".?
Ms. Blog Queen,
I cannot speak for all men, but I can certainly speak for myself. In love, I have floated past the moon head over blue-lit heels and found butterflies in my bed in the morning. Nevertheless, I have managed to keep a straight face, gaga being alien to my nature.
Susangalique said...
I have been working with my profile and looks like I will just have to be faceless and hatless, I so wanted to wear my turbin hat for the potboySusangaliques question, is how a soul might beat the lethargy of bla
Miss Galique,
I will be happy to see you in your turban, whenever it appears!
A soul might beat the famous Lethargy of Blah by waking up. As Thoreau said, most people are sleepers in a long railroad track. Spices and hot oil, a pan full of suds, a book or picture I almost understand and want to grasp, unearthly encounters, music, the opposing sex: all these wake me up.
Dear Pot Boy,
Fitful Zephyr,
Shine not at all times! You are a zephyr, not a sun.
Women ripen, copper tarnishes. I am also fond of copper as it heats quickly and is responsive to temperature changes. Some people clean tarnish with vinegar or salted lemon halves or other easy home remedies, but I do not dislike the evidence of time.
blog queen said...
I have another question for the pot boy. Are there ghosts in your palace? I was with a friend tonight at our local coffee house and we had contact with a ghost. Details are on my blog, but I want to know about your palace, does it have ghosts, and what are they like?
Dear B. Q.,
I believe that the kitchen and butler’s pantry are haunted by the ghosts of vegetables. Ghosts of avocados rock back and forth in the tiered basket. Melons skitter about on tiny legs like unexpectedly graceful pigs. I once saw the ghost of a large rutabaga tapdancing on the kitchen table, surrounded by a ring of bobbing scallions.
Amanda J. Sisk said…
Dear Pot Boy:
Pls do not feel unloved and come out and play! There are few worse fates than being unloved, it is true...but you could have a name that means "worthy of love" and feel the weight this title adds to the burden that is absence.
Joyful Amanda,
The recipe is in the file, waiting for the appearance of lovely red orbs of tomato. I look out the window and see much snow. A ripe tomato would make a fine contrast.
Your question is challenging. It seems, perhaps, that you may have more than one gift (sculpture, printmaking, drawing, painting?) but that you have been repeatedly urged to follow a certain way. The gift or gifts you relish are ones that you enjoy more than 95% of the time. The gift that seems “right” but lesser you enjoy a mere 95% of the time.
First, I would suggest that 95% is quite high.
Yet you love something else more.
Since I am somewhat in the dark—not completely, from what I gather of you—I would give these examples.
Here’s one that’s bliss followed in despite of gifts. A man I know—shall we call him X—was talented in the theatre and writing. Nevertheless, he had a pronounced to become a doctor and did so, despite the fact that math was not one of his favorite enterprises and was a thing that had to be endured along the way. Many people protested his decisions.
As a doctor, he has a notable talent at diagnosis because he has a strong memory and can make imaginative leaps to new possibilities. It seems that the old gifts have not vanished but give strength to the new vocation. He still does a little theatre. He still writes. But these will never be his life. They add much—very much—but the art of medicine is his.
And let us consider a stubborn woman, Y, who is an example of braided gifts. She writes poetry, she writes stories, she writes novels. Yes, you know who I mean. When she calls a stop to one thing, something else bubbles up. One mode influences another. Has she been writing a novel and turns to poems? Well, then, narrative and characters creep into the poems. Has she been writing poems and turns to fiction? Then maybe this time she wants the prose to go bow-string tight. The three fertilize one another. Borges said of his fiction and his poetry that he didn’t know which was the dog and which the tail, and whether the tail wagged the dog or the dog wagged the tail.
Let us consider Z, a Pot Boy and Advice Columnist. The mystical circles that I inscribe on the shining bottom of a pot as I scrub are what bring forth the gush of truth.
Those are examples I well know: gifts united or gifts abandoned and yet somehow bound to new vocation. But you are a mystery, somewhat to yourself as well as me. Are you better at one pursuit now than the other or others? Years can change that: persistence can change that imbalance, swing it around to the other side.
Dear Lucy, resident of Box Elder--
Illustration: Credit goes to sxc.hu and Nathan May of Durant, Oklahoma for the photograph of the inside of a copper pot.
Amanda, I had that today for lunch or at least something very close to it. I am not quite sure about the pot boy though I will have to research him more before commenting further.
ReplyDeleteI send a deep curtsy to The Pot Boy for his sage and compassionate response.
ReplyDeleteNow, off to read more Yeats...
And one more -- not a curtsy, but a slow g a s s h o -- for this wonderment:
ReplyDelete"Melons skitter about on tiny legs like unexpectedly graceful pigs."
That is the best sentence I've read all day, and the image makes me want to rush out and buy melons just to see more of their ghosts.
thank you pot boy, that is good advice indeed
ReplyDeleteyou had a bunch of questions piling up!
Greetings, supplicants at the tawdry kitchen throne of the Pot Boy! I am glad to have pleased some of you. Robert, you may find a list of my sudsy effusions a few posts down the page.
ReplyDeleteAmanda,
ReplyDeleteIn case you come by: are we locked out? I couldn't leave a note but was glad to see the man-of-clay after the refiner's touch. Very lovely.
Marly:
ReplyDelete'Twas not my hand turning key in lock! My dear web designer has been making some changes that banished the blog a few days ago...I've alerted him to the comments problem.
My computer charger started on fire and I have no way of charging my laptop in the middle of Tuscany. I'll be somewhat scarce for a few weeks until I have figured out how to get a new charger. Will then reply to kind PB.
Robert: Yum. I think the PB is trustworthy.
Phew!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dear Pot Boy
Amanda,
ReplyDeleteYour charger caught fire? Another unpleasant possibility I had never considered. I'll have to start a new list of things to worry about...
Miss Zephyr,
ReplyDeleteThe pleasure (as it usually is around here) is mine.
Dearest Pot Boy,
ReplyDeleteThank you for the information on men/boys in love and ghosts.
It is good to know that men/boys have floated past the moon head over blue-lit heels and found butterflies in my bed in the morning. I rather like that line. I guess being a guy the trick is to stay straight faced through it all.
I love the description of the palace as a rabbit warren. It makes me think of hobbits and such. I also like your vegetable ghosts. I've never had any of those to contend with thank goodness, but I'd love to see them dancing. The next time I run into a ghost I shall have to remember the words to banish them.
Thanks again. At your service,kind pot boy.
There is one person in the warren who has been accused of being a hobbit--barefoot, small, fond of elevensies.
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure, Mistress Donna--
Good to be back and to read your as-ever intriguing words..Lovely.
ReplyDeleteI am one step closer to enlightenment...
ReplyDeleteLucy,
ReplyDeleteThanks for your gracious response--a thing that a poor Pot Boy and advice columnist shall struggle to deserve...
Jan,
Welcome back to the kitchen! A Pot Boy's Advice: keep out of the fire.
Does your hobbit type person have hairy toes and love mushrooms?
ReplyDeleteI've been accused of being an oversized hobbit once or twice myself, hairy toes, mushrooms and all.
An oversized hobbit with a mushroom fetish and hairy toes: I missed that entirely at NCCAT. Donna, you should have been more forthcoming!
ReplyDeleteDear PB:
ReplyDeleteApologies for the long delay before responding to your kind words. My computer's wires are now reconfigured and pose a diminished threat of bursting into flames.
I believe I made a typo of sorts. I meant to communicate that I enjoy something I do about 5% of the time...which leaves a 95%burden of misery.
Your illustration of the doctor was quite encouraging...as was your mention of perseverance. It is not easy to go against those(whether motivated by misunderstanding, misguided concern, green monsters, or their own vision of what is best for someone else) advising against the path we think/know would make us the most joyful beings we can be. And then environment can play such a profound role in how we perceive ourselves and choose our paths.
Next time I have a pre-midlife-crisis, I will re-read your words. I have been looking at "dilettante" through the wrong eyes...I shall go back to the original Italian and then back to the Latin. There is no negative connotation here: To delight. Lover of the arts. Devoted amateur.
Thank you,
AJS
Amanda,
ReplyDeleteThat does change things, doesn't it? Perhaps you should spend five percent of your creative time on that activity and the rest where your heart is. Percentages can change in time, of course.