Sunday, September 8, 2013

Milton is my Peaches and Cream


I love pie more than life itself. It's a problem. I've missed parties and study groups and occasionally classes for the sake of baking up a pecan or chocolate banana tart. You know how they say depression or anxiety starts becoming an issue when it begins to change your behavior and relationships with others? That's how I am with pie. I regret nothing.
It hasn't always been this way. This one time when I was six my mother gave me a slice of pumpkin at Thanksgiving and told me it was cake, which it most definitely was not. Apparently ground pepper isn't the same thing as nutmeg. This betrayal spurred an all-consuming hatred for pie that lasted through high school. To snip a long story short I eventually made a peaches and cream pie for a school project and realized pie was awesome when baked properly.
I've also come to
terms with pumpkins.
If I may force a metaphor,  poetry was and is this way for me as well. Until sophomore year in high school I shied away from anything with "meters" and "stanzas," and the only thing I could force myself to write was a limerick about a cat who ate so much he exploded.
But then along came a little book called Paradise Lost that completely remodeled my perspective. It was difficult and confusing and just a little bit weird, but the gorgeous words flowed in such away that, after finishing, I finally found an appreciation for the poetic genre and classical poetry in particular. I owe my choice of course of study to Milton, along with my love for the English language in general, and I am ridiculously excited to be studying his life and works this semester. Almost as excited as I am for pie.

3 comments:

  1. This may require you to bring us pies to class so we can experience the awesomeness.

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  2. Ironically enough, when I tasted the best peach I've ever had in my entire life, I came to the conclusion that peaches must have been the fruit that was hanging from the tree of knowledge of good and evil--in which case, I sympathize with Adam and Eve a little more because... I mean, peaches, right?
    Please bring peach pie.

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  3. If I were Adam and the forbidden fruit were peaches, I'd be the first to fall. And then I'd ask Eve if she knew a good cobbler recipe.

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