Story for the Day: The Cream Tea
There is a great debate that rages on in Marridon over the creation of a cream tea: those in the south where the capital is situated do it one way, and those in the north in the country do it another. Each boasts that its own recipe is best, but Bartleby has the final word on whether scones or round cakes wins:
The hatch opened, Bartleby emerged, his mind only half
awake, and he stumbled clouterly across the deck, his subconscious led by the
promise of a warm and familiar meal. “Mmff—round cakes…” he mumbled, davering
about. He reached Rannig and clung to the giant’s legs, clawing his way toward
the breakfast trey. “Tea—tea—“ he whimpered, “somebodygivemethetea…” He wilted
against Rannig and held out his hand. “My boy…” he grumbled, “the tea!”
A cup
was put into Bartleby’s hand, it was filled from the pot, and with a
semisomnolent pout, Bartleby soomed the entirely of the cup and slumped against
the giant, fully awake, though not entirely happy about it.
“Beautiful,
beautiful tea…” he murmured, sinking in happy agony. “Another—pour me another…”
The cup
was refilled, and when Bartleby had finished the better part of it, he rose to
his feet, unfurling his aged petals to the sun.
“Oh,
thank you, my dear boy,” he exhaled. “Marridon black, twice oxidized, a perfect
vintange, hmm.” The milk was added, and once he had finished his cup and was
allowed to be called fully awake, his eyes and nose began to operate again.
Butter and baked bread made its way toward him, he sniffed and followed the heady
scent to the trey. “What--? What is this, what is this?” pulling Rannig’s arm
down, mantling over the trey. “Is it a cream tea? By my tinder—it is a cream
tea. A real Marridon cream tea, just as it would be done at home. My dear boy,
you are an arberous thrumble much of the time, but when you want to prove
yourself a thinking, thoughtful person—Wait a moment. There’s something wrong—I
can smell it. What is this, what is this?” He inspected the baked portion of
the trey and gave a start. “Round cakes?” he cried. All the smiles and thrills
that had accompanied him to the deck were now gone, confusion and
miscontrsution assailed in every way, the flouts and frowns of budding
indignation clouding every feature. “No, no, no— what is this balding blunderation!
You cannot have a traditional Marridon cream tea with round cakes, my boy.
Madness and mobnobbery, to put an inferior breakfast item where a scone should
be—a scone, my boy, must go there—Scones are the very foundation of a capital
cream tea! They are the brick and mortar, they are the bedrock upon which all
hope of an excellent breakfast depends. A scone rests at the heart of every Marridonian
worth his weight in tithes—it is our backbone, our vocation, our moral fibre. Round
cakes—Ha! You have shamed the greatest breakfast Marridon has ever invented by
replacing a scone with a round cake—but this is what is to be expected from a
muculent mudsludge Frewyn, who thinks boiled oats and brined meat is the best
breakfast a farm can afford next to bogcheese and baked eggs--”
“But
Bartleby,” Rannig gently interposed, “I like boiled oats and brined meat—“
“Of
course you do! Any dirtmonger born with a backhoe in his hand thinks a saltlick
for breakfast is a good idea. You wouldn’t know a good breakfast if it fled the
larder and cooked itself.”
Rannig
paused and wondered whether the breakfast could might itself, and whether it
would choose to be boiled oats or a cream tea, either giving him reprive from
making the meals anyhow.
“Llangollyn teas are done with
round cakes,” Bartleby continued. “Pabularoty peasantry, to be eating round
cakes instead of scones like a sullied slate miner. And if you ask me ‘what is
the difference between a scone and a round cake’, as I know you mean to do,
because you cannot help yourseif, I will have that dented potato fadge Peppone
use his throwing knife on the trey, to diperse the mockery of a cream tea
you’ve made and cut up all the rounds cakes into farls, to feed the birds and serve
as a reminder that you are never to abuse a cream tea ever again.”
A huff
and a pause, and Rannig waited only a moment to ask, “But what’s the
difference, Bartleby?”
The old
man’s face reddened, and his nose hairs flared, trying to escape their bed and
strangle their antagonist. “Were the captain not by, I would find a way to
drown you.“ He snorted through his nose. “Round cakes are made with yeast, and
scones are made with buttermilk and a little sugar—and anyway, it doesn’t
matter because a Marridon cream tea is done with a scone and not a round cake,
and that is the end—that is the tradition, one which has been kept for centuries—literally
centuries—because it has been deemed a perfect breakfast the way it is and must
never be changed. A scone, hot and split, ready to be dressed, is the pride of
Marridon proper. With the jam on the bread—only raspberry or strawberry will
do-- and a dollop of cream on top, to be the crown jewel of the morning plate—but,
what is this? What have you done here?” He glanced at the ready-made round cake
and gasped. “Captain! Captain!” clutching his chest, in a horror. “Look! Do you
see? Look what the boy has done!”
“I have
seen it already, Bartleby,” said Danaco, taking half a round cake, “and rather
expected you to be in a passion over it.”
“How—“ Bartleby
whimpered, gripping his robes. “How could you let him do it? Oh, cruel, cruel
juntacular calamity! It is ruined! Absolutely ruined!”
He
withered against the captain, who ate his round cake and sipped his tea in
perfect peace, and crumbled to the deck, gripping his hat and rocking in anguish.
“Oh, I
am hurt, hurt to my molecules! I am entirely thrashed, absolutely stuck
through,” said Bartleby, with a faltering voice. “You have killed me, my boy,
slain and killed me. You have plunged a hat pin through my heart!”
Rannig
had no idea of hat pins, and only looked down and nudged the old man with his
toes. “Yer lookin’ all right to me, Bartleby.”
“Oh, the sight of it—it is
blinding! It is a frustratory eyesore, an abominant wreck! It is giving me
palpitations!” Bartleby whinged, gripping at his heart. “Cream before the jam—cream
on the bread before the jam-- how could you, my boy? How could you mean injure
me?”
Rannig
took up the round cake and studied it. “Just put the cream on the bottom,” he
mused. “Sure don’t know how that changes things, but if I put too much, ye can
put more jam on the other side and just put the sides together—“
Bartleby
was almost in a rage. “How dare you suggest such disgraceful and sacrilegious
behaviour?” he cried, aghast. “The balance, my boy—“ pulling himself up and
gripping Rannig’s tunic, “—the balance would be absolutely destroyed, if I put
that much jam on the other side! I cannot eat a preserve-painted sugarslice like
a common calamite.There is a way to do things, and there is a way to do things,
my boy, and you must learn the proper way to make the greatest breakfast that
has ever been gifted to civilization. There is an order that must be maintained,
which makes a cream tea what it is. The scone goes first, then the jam, and
then a small dollop of cream atop. It can be done no other way, and that is all.
It is a ceremony, a time-honoured tradition, to construct a properly done scone,
a ritual that cannot be hurried through or made a mockery of with your round
cakes and your heavy cream—“
“It’s
clotted cream, Bartleby,” Rannig insisted.
“And it had better be, my boy,” Bartleby
flouted, staring at Rannig over his spectacles and pointing a finger at his
nose. “And if it is only heavy cream, I will get out the salting pan and flay
you in it, that you might never again bemire so beloved—“ Another atrocity
suddenly caught Bartleby’s eye. “DID YOU PUT BUTTER UNDER THE CREAM?”
“Say
no, Rannig,” said the captain, smirking to himself, “for if you say yes, even
though you have done it for good reason, I’m sure, Bartleby will hang himself
by his furnishings.”
“I will
hang the boy by my furnishings,”
Bartleby corrected him, the hair on his ears frilling on end.
Rannig
frowned at the round cakes. “Aye, I put the butter on ‘em-- ye gotta when
they’re made on a grittle, ‘cause we can’t have a range on the ship-- but I’m
sayin’ I didn’t ‘cause the boss told me to.”
“You
cannot hide such an oversight from me, no matter how the captain might tell you
to disguise it,” Bartleby contended. “I can see it, a butteracous crust forming
around the edges—unconscionable! Captain, do you see what he has done?”
stabbing a finger at the slight. “Outrage and infuriation! This is not to be
borne. This is a crime, a sin against the pride of our nation. Make him go and
fix it at once. I protest—absolutely protest against this treatment.”
“You do,”
said the captain, dressing another round cake. “You have been protesting for
the last five minutes together while I have been eating your breakfast for you.
You cry so much, one would think you subsist on anger alone.”
“A
sentiment you ought to nuture more of, captain, if this kind of misconduct
continues. You know how a cream tea ought to be done, and yet you allow for
round cakes, butter under the cream, and the cream to be put on the bottom. It
is wrong, very wrong, and it is heathenry that no civilized person should be
made to put up with.”
“Heathenry,
my old friend, while disagreeable at home in a tea house, is delicious abroad,”
said Danaco, eyeing the last bite of his round cake. He finished it and licked
his fingers. “By Myrellenos, Rannig, you do better by a cream tea than any tea
house in Marridon could, only do not tell my mistress at the Cypher I have said
half so much. She should be envious of your powers and try to capture you, to
have her work her kitchen and garner all of Marridon to her establishment with
such a devilish good spread.”
“Thanks,
boss,” Rannig beamed.
Bartleby’s
spleen had risen to his chest, and his nose hairs wiggled. His custom had been
slighted, his heritage offended, and feeling the captain had betrayed his sensibilities, he went to stand with his face to the mast and shout to himself.
“THE
JAM GOES ON THE BOTTOM-- ON THE BOTTOM, YOU RAGING INVERTEBRATE—WHO LET THE BOY
BE IN CHARGE OF HIS OWN BREATHING—HANG YOUR ROUND CAKES AND YOUR SHOCKING
EXCUSE FOR A CREAM TEA— AND I’M SURE I DON’T CARE ABOUT HOW LONG IT TOOK YOU TO
MAKE IT--“
“That
will do, my friend,” said Danaco firmly. “You have had your cry out enough, and
you will please to have it done. Most of the men are stil sleeping, and I mean
to keep it that way, if I am to have two minutes to myself. Keep your
protestations if they nourish you, and leave the culinary scandals to me. You
may disclaim now, but you will be hungry in a moment, and then we shall see how
well your adherence to tradition satisfies you.”
“I will
have something else, if I’m hungry,” Bartleby humphed, stamping toward them. “There
is plenty of cheese or a boiled egg-- and I’m sure I won’t be hungry. I wasn’t
when I came up here, and I certainly am not now—“
A low
curmuring sound intruded, loud wambles followed, and Bartleby fell to the deck,
holding his stomach, rolling about in a torment.
“Oh,
wretched, wretched hunger!” he wailed, holding his legs to his chest. “I am famished!
I am starved to the bone! I will perish, if I do not eat! My insides are
leading a rebellion against me! Why must they revolt now?”
“Boss,”
Rannig whispered, as though Bartleby could not hear, “is Bartleby dyin’?”
“In
general, he must be—we all are, in our own way and in our own time, if we get
pedantic about it-- but we shall not let him suffer long. Come, Bartleby.
Enough of this pageant. Get you up from the deck and dry your crocodile tears.
A round cake awaits you.”
“Ha-ha-hang
your r-round cakes!” the old man wept. “It is the boy’s fault I am hollowed in
the first place. If he did not torture me by making me smell such a breakfast—“
A violent wamble burgled out, and Bartleby folded over himself. “The edacity!”
he moaned. “My gastric juices are eating me, they are boring me through!”
The
captain gave little quarter to such an exhibition; he rather relied on
Bartleby’s upstarts, and a comical parade at the expense of one whose
halfhearted invectives were always amusing. “What shall we do with him,
Rannig?” he asked, smiling down at the old man, who was curled at his feet.
“Shall we perform an experiment and see how long the old man can go without
being coddled?”
“I am
never coddled,” Bartleby asserted, sitting up. He coiled back down to the deck
and moped. “I simply like when things are properly done, and I would rather
clap a moth between my hands than be forced to celebrate mediocrity and mistake.”
He whined through his nose, turned his face aside, and pretended to cry. He
whuffled and wept, trying to incur sympathy and gaining none of it, and once he
had done his display, he pouted and said, “…I will have one round cake.”
Rannig
giggled.“Should I feed him, boss?”
“Go on,
my bogbean,” said Danaco, “give him one round cake and you shall see how he
perks.”
A cake
was wedged between Bartleby’s lips, the first rush of raspberry and cream broke
upon him, and he was up immediately, gnashing fervently away, remarking how
“scrumptious the cake is—I can hardly taste the yeast, not in the least bit
stodgy—the jam is not overly sweetened—the butter does make the cake more
sumptuous, but the cream overpowers it enough--” leaving the captain to smile
to himself and shake his head at his old friend.
“My,
my,” he simpered, “how agreeable you are when sated. You may cry about scones
from this morning to the next, but the threat of starvation makes easy beggars
of highborn men.”
“Mmppf—I’m
not highborn, captain. You know I’m not—mff, delicious,” Bartleby slottered.
“No,
you were not born with a bit of silver in each hand as I was, but for your all
your education, you were never taught humbleness, or you have never applied it,
I do not know which. Rannig was born in obscurity and has known very little of show
and address, and he is the most grateful and modest summer-squash a captain
could ask for.”
Bartleby
fancied obscurity rather lovely this time of the year and disdained being
compared to the giant, a boy who would be happy with old shoes and a handbarrow
if given him. He knew privation well enough, but humility did not factor into
breakfast, and Bartleby ate his round cakes and liked them very well despite
all his former remonstrations.
Comments
Post a Comment