Grandma’s Bean Pot
I find it the cellar next to the owl
candle in a carton, hidden behind
dish shards and a stool
one day … really. The pot’s dust-coated.
Brown and beige surface unscarred despite
toting from town to city, city to country,
country to country. Saturday night servant.
It has heard discussions about Roosevelt,
Ike, McCarthy and Kennedy before
being shunted aside, doomed to wander
the world. Ignored, unloved. I sort hard,
brown beans like Grandma once did. She
looked out at two maple trees, my swing and
The clothesline with white sheets flapping
In the fall wind. I see a château and
trees with yellow leaves, not like their
New England scarlet cousins. Beans
soak in my silvery bowl
swelling as I go in search of salt pork.
My butcher offers bacon. It will
have to do. I add molasses, onion,
mustard, water. Grandma tells me
how in spindly writing on a
yellowed file card. Saucisson
replaces hot dogs. The cole slaw
tastes the same, carrying me back
across the sea to childhood Saturdays.
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