Oatmeal
-Galway Kinnell (When One Has Lived a Long Time
Alone)
I eat oatmeal for breakfast.
I make it on the hot plate and put skimmed
milk on it.
I eat it alone.
I am aware it is not good to eat oatmeal
alone.
Its consistency is such that is better for your mental health if
somebody eats it with you.
That is why I often think up an imaginary
companion to have breakfast with.
Possibly it is even worse to eat oatmeal
with an imaginary companion.
Nevertheless, yesterday morning, I ate my
oatmeal porridge, as he called it with John Keats.
Keats said I was
absolutely right to invite him:
due to its glutinous texture, gluey
lumpishness, hint of slime, and unsual willingness to disintigrate, oatmeal
should not be eaten alone.
He said that in his opinion, however, it is
perfectly OK to eat it with an imaginary companion, and that he himself had
enjoyed memorable porridges with Edmund Spenser and John Milton.
Even if
eating oatmeal with an imaginary companion is not as wholesome as Keats
claims, still, you can learn something from it.
Yesterday morning, for
instance, Keats told me about writing the "Ode to a Nightingale."
He had a
heck of a time finishing it those were his words "Oi 'ad a 'eck of a toime,"
he said, more or less, speaking through his porridge.
He wrote it quickly,
on scraps of paper, which he then stuck in his pocket,
but when he got
home he couldn't figure out the order of the stanzas, and he and a friend
spread the papers on a table, and they made some sense of them, but he isn't
sure to this day if they got it right.
An entire stanza may have slipped
into the lining of his jacket through a hole in his pocket.
He still
wonders about the occasional sense of drift between stanzas, and the way here
and there a line will go into the configuration of a Moslem at prayer, then
raise itself up and peer about, and then lay \ itself down slightly off the
mark, causing the poem to move forward with a reckless, shining wobble.
He
said someone told him that later in life Wordsworth heard about the scraps of
paper on the table, and tried shuffling some stanzas of his own, but only made
matters worse.
I would not have known any of this but for my reluctance to
eat oatmeal alone.
When breakfast was over, John recited "To Autumn."
He
recited it slowly, with much feeling, and he articulated the words lovingly,
and his odd accent sounded sweet.
He didn't offer the story of writing "To
Autumn," I doubt if there is much of one.
But he did say the sight of a
just-harvested oat field go thim started on it, and two of the lines, "For
Summer has o'er-brimmed their clammy cells" and "Thou watchest the last
oozings hours by hours," came to him while eating oatmeal alone.
I can see
him drawing a spoon through the stuff, gazing into the glimmering furrows,
muttering.
Maybe there is no sublime; only the shining of the amnion's
tatters.
For supper tonight I am going to have a baked potato left over
from lunch.
I am aware that a leftover baked potato is damp, slippery, and
simultaneaously gummy and crumbly, and therefore I'm going to invite Patrick
Kavanagh to join me.
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