perpetual teatime
My grandmother is a bit on the eccentric side. My father always says it’s because she has too much money, but he gets weird about money things so I’m not really sure that’s it.
I love to visit her house. When I was younger I’d play for hours in the backyard. In the garden there’s this table set for tea but everything is bronze, cups and books and teapot and even the tablecloth. When it rains the cups fill with rainwater and I remember it looked almost like tea to my younger self. I think I tried to drink it once, with some difficulty considering the cups don’t come up from the table.
I asked her about it recently, having gotten old enough to wonder where the table and its contents came from instead of just accepting it as it was. She told me that once it was a regular table and she and my grandfather would sit there and read with their tea every afternoon. After he died she couldn’t bear clearing it away and she hired someone to cover the whole thing in bronze, so their last teatime would stay there, always.
When I visit now I leave roses in the teacups.
About flax-golden tales. Photo by Carey Farrell. Text by Erin Morgenstern.
2 Comments
Paul · March 5, 2010 at 3:42 pm
I’m sorry, I was in Dublin when I read this, and short of time. But I loved it. That shared private moment of tea-time, and the book, caught, forever….
PJ · March 31, 2010 at 12:05 pm
ahhh… the tea cups caught me .. I’m hooked !
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