It's summer, and just the sunniest
of afternoons.
Outside the sanatorium,
in the arboretum, the attendees
are served their teas.
The strudel is toothsome
when Herr Stumpf, from the lectern,
contradicts the consensus
that I is for ice cream. No, now
he's proposing that I's for spaghetti,
all spaghetti, he avers,
being once alphabetti,
all spaghetti being once that capital I
that it is when it's dry,
not the maddening doodle that it is
when it's done and awry.
His audience listen,
but once he has spoken,
then beneath their applause
that's not fulsome but token,
they don't soften, no rather, they stiffen.
...
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Tricky clever poem about the consistency of spaghetting noodles and how they take on different qualities in a sanatorium where they also drink tea.