by Dr. Jeffrey Lant
Author’s program note. This is a story about a fruit so rich that
once you start thinking about it you cannot rest until you are eating
some… popping them into your mouth as fast as you can, crushing them…
letting the richness of its sweet, sweet juice drip down your chin… glad
to have all you can eat… joyfully careless about what you waste… for
there will always be strawberries enough for you… you are absolutely
sure of that!
But as Deana Carter knows, the lush abundance of strawberries is not
unlimited… and so she twangs her tale of high summer, desire, a taste so
sweet it maddens you and never satiates… producing a wine you can never
get enough of… a strawberry wine… a wine that you can never forget…
though sometimes you wish you’d never come to know.
And so, I have selected for today’s occasional music “Strawberry
Wine” by Matraca Berg and Gary Harrison, released in August, 1996.
Nashville record companies found the song overly long, controversial,
and not memorable enough. But when Carter sang her heart out about the
summer, the boy… the strawberries and their wine… the record won Song of
the Year at the Country Music Association Awards. Go now to any search
engine and listen to it. You’ll find yourself remembering… you’ll find
yourself craving… you’ll want their taste again… the berries always see
to that…. for they are an imperious fruit.
Her Majesty’s strawberry. On a picture perfect summer day one August I
was in Scotland, in the Highlands, at Balmoral… a country castle
conceived by Prince Albert, the beautiful German prince loved
obsessively by Queen Victoria. For an American used to the White House
with its layer after layer of security, Balmoral comes as a rather
unnerving shock. “Security” consisted of a single guard, unobtrusive,
reading a newspaper. There might be, there must be more… but that’s all I
ever saw. He barely looked at us.. smiled… and waved. Thus does Her
Britannic Majesty tell you she is beloved of the people and doesn’t need
a legion of centurions to protect her… unlike the president of the
Great Republic who always needs more… and more.
And so in due course, my friend and I found ourselves in the
magnificent park, expansive, serene, as lovely a place as Earth
provides. And in the park I found a kitchen garden… the Queen’s garden…
and in this garden I saw a strawberry, huge, perfectly ripe, ready to be
eaten. And so I reached down to pluck it and enjoy… whereupon I felt a
strong hand pulling me up and heard my friend’s voice, no longer
amiable, but commanding, imperative, stentorian: “Do not touch that
strawberry…. that is the Queen’s berry!” And I realized what being a
subject of the Windsors meant, whilst I was the child of revolution and
lese majeste/. And so the uneaten berry remained… for the delectation of
the Queen.
Even dukes get only leaves.
I was crushed but as my friend was driving I had to give way, and gracefully, too — or else.
Then I had a thought that cheered me up. Even the grandest members of
the nobility couldn’t eat of the Royal fruit with impunity. They had to
make do with the strawberries’ leaves. And no, I am not making this up.
A duke’s coronet proves my point. When a man becomes a duke (and there
are only 24 such people in the entire realm of Great Britain) he is
entitled to a silver-gilt circlet called a coronet. It features eight
strawberry leaves — not one more and never a single one less. Thus does
the sovereign elevate ambitious members of the aristocracy… and keep her
strawberries for herself.
Other gentlemen of high rank and title are also entitled to
strawberry leaves on their coronets. And here there is a most curious
conundrum: marquesses who rank just below dukes in the peerage of the
realm are entitled to four strawberry leaves… but earls, who rank below
marquesses, get eight. What can this mean? For peers, as you may
imagine, are protocol mad… and scrutinize their inferiors for any
indication that they are claiming rank and privilege to which they are
not strictly entitled. You can be sure there’s some fiddle going on
here… but if the marquesses are in a pet of high indignation, they have
but to look far down at the viscounts and barons who have not a single
strawberry leaf between them… and that’s just the way these marquesses
mean to keep it — “Honi soit qui mal y pense.”. Strawberry leaves mean
strawberry tea.
Fortunately, there is more you can do with your strawberry leaves
than wait for the Queen to make you a duke. That, after all, could be a
long time coming since the last non-royal duke was his grace of
Westminster, in 1874. It’s true that her present majesty when a young
woman offered to make Sir Winston Churchill duke of London… but he
declined and there the matter rests, perhaps forever.
And you’ll agree, this situation could be more than irritating for
those who every morning see in their looking glasses, not milord this or
the right honorable that but… His Grace the Duke of… resplendent in
ermine and strawberry leaves.
These men, well bred for hundreds of years, offer the correct
aquiline features, the correct pedigree, with generations of the right
fathers and acquiescing mothers, masters of every arcane procedure, the
right words and impeccable cravat, these men I tell you are smoldering
with rage, aggravation, frustration, worthies all marooned in the wrong
time. For them, each of them only the calming propensities of strawberry
leaf tea will do… poured in a fragile cup of Minton, delivered by
Nannie who always knows just what to do. “Have some more sugar, ducks.
There, there, it’ll be all right.”
And so does Nanny, who loves you best, goes out with wicker basket on
her arm, to the places she knows well, where the fresh wild
strawberries grow or the sweet woodland berries. Take 1 tablespoon of
dried rose petals, 1/2 teaspoon of yarrow, 1 teaspoon of strawberry
leaves, a pinch of mint or blackberry leaves. Add 1 cup of boiling water
and allow to steep. Choler cannot long exist in the presence of such
determined coziness.
Emily Dickinson (1830-1886).
It was perhaps in pursuit of these ingredients that Emily Dickinson,
mistress of opaque language, stepped out, “Over the fence” …
“Over the fence — Strawberries — grow — Over the fence — I could
climb — if I tried, I know — Berries are nice. But — if I strained my
Apron — God, would certainly scold! Oh, dear, — I guess if He were a Boy
— he’d — climb — if He could!”
So, let’s leave it like that, for as Deana Carter sang, “It’s funny
how those memories they last. Like strawberry wine… (when) The hot July
moon saw everything” and the strawberries were there, bright and
beckoning, just over the fence.
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