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Rice pudding - Rice pudding in literature

Rice pudding - Rice pudding in literature: Encyclopedia II - Rice pudding - Rice pudding in literature

A reference to rice pudding is found in the third verse of the seventeenth-century nursery rhyme, "Pop Goes the Weasel:"     Half a pound of tuppenny rice,       Half a pound of treacle.     Mix it up and make it nice,       Pop goes the weasel. Rice pudding is mentioned frequently in literature of the Victorian and Edwardian eras, typically in the context of a cheap, plain, familiar food, often served to children or invalids, an ...

See also:

Rice pudding, Rice pudding - Types of Rice Pudding, Rice pudding - History, Rice pudding - Rice pudding in folklore, Rice pudding - Rice pudding in literature, Rice pudding - Recipes old and new

Rice pudding, Rice pudding - History, Rice pudding - Recipes old and new, Rice pudding - Rice pudding in folklore, Rice pudding - Rice pudding in literature, Rice pudding - Types of Rice Pudding

Rice pudding: Encyclopedia II - Rice pudding - Rice pudding in literature



Rice pudding - Rice pudding in literature

A reference to rice pudding is found in the third verse of the seventeenth-century nursery rhyme, "Pop Goes the Weasel:"

    Half a pound of tuppenny rice,
      Half a pound of treacle.
    Mix it up and make it nice,
      Pop goes the weasel.

Rice pudding is mentioned frequently in literature of the Victorian and Edwardian eras, typically in the context of a cheap, plain, familiar food, often served to children or invalids, and often rendered boring by too-frequent inclusion in menus.

In Edward Bulwer-Lytton's Kenelm Chillingly, a would-be host reassures a prospective guest: "Don't fear that you shall have only mutton-chops and a rice-pudding...". In Henry James' A Passionate Pilgrim, the narrator laments: "having dreamed of lamb and spinach and a salade de saison, I sat down in penitence to a mutton-chop and a rice pudding."

Charles Dickens relates an incident of shabby treatment in A Schoolboy's Story: "it was imposing on Old Cheeseman to give him nothing but boiled mutton through a whole Vacation, but that was just like the system. When they didn't give him boiled mutton, they gave him rice pudding, pretending it was a treat. And saved the butcher."

In Ethel Turner's Seven Little Australians, the children express dissatisfaction with their food. "My father and Esther... are having roast fowl, three vegetables, and four kinds of pudding," Pip says angrily. "It isn't fair!" His sister notes that "we had dinner at one o'clock." "Boiled mutton and carrots and rice pudding!" her brother replies, witheringly.

Rice Pudding is the title and subject of a poem by A. A. Milne, in which the narrator professes puzzlement as to what is the matter with Mary Jane, who is "crying with all her might and main/And she won't eat her dinner—rice pudding again—/What is the matter with Mary Jane?" As the poem proceeds, the reader comes to suspect that Mary Jane's problem is connected with the word "again."

An 1884 New York Times article is entitled Living on a Small Salary: Close Economy Practiced by a Clerk and his Wife. They Live Comfortably in a Brooklyn Flat and Save Nearly $300 Out of a Yearly Income of $1000. "You observe," says the husband, "that although we have but little beyond the bare necessities of life we manage to live comfortably and happily." "Yes, indeed, we are happy," interjects the wife. The reporter describes their evening meal as a plate containing "a nice cut of beef, a couple of boiled potatoes, and a liberal portion of green peas." For dessert, there is rice pudding, which the reporter describes as "truly a delicious compound of rice and egg and sugared frosting."

A 1917 report by the International Committee of the Red Cross, on treatment of Turkish prisoners of war in Egypt describes the food with approval. The "ordinary diet" is described as "Breakfast: Arab bread; sweetened fresh milk. Lunch: Arab bread; beef; rice, vegetables. Dinner: Arab bread; rice soup; rice pudding."

Rice pudding is mentioned with much more affection in an incident related by Walt Whitman in Specimen Days. Whitman visited an invalid soldier who "was very sick, with no appetite... he confess'd that he had a hankering for a good home-made rice pudding—thought he could relish it better than anything... I soon procured B. his rice pudding. A Washington lady, (Mrs. O'C.), hearing his wish, made the pudding herself, and I took it up to him the next day. He subsequently told me he lived upon it for three or four days."

In Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy the supercomputer Deep Thought derives the existence of rice pudding from first principles. This is to counterpoint between the complexity of Deep Thought and its task of exploring the eternal verities, with simplicity of the pudding.

Other related archives

1542, 1615, 18th century, 1917, A. A. Milne, Charles Dickens, Christmas, Deep Thought, Denmark, Douglas Adams, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Ethel Turner, Gervase Markham, Henry James, Kheer, Malmö, Medieval, Middle East, Moghuls, Mongols, Norway, Persia, Pop Goes the Weasel, Rice, Romans, Scandinavia, Southeast Asia, Sweden, Sütlaç, Teurgoule, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Walt Whitman, almond, basmati, black rice, blót, brown rice, brown sugar, butter, cinnamon, coconut milk, condensed, cream, dessert, eggs, evaporated, first principles, fruit, ginger, glutinous rice, grated, honey, ingredients, jasmine rice, medicinal, milk, nursery rhyme, nutmeg, oven, pistachio, quart, rice, rose water, spices, sugar, supercomputer, sweetener, teacup, teaspoons, tomte, vanilla



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Rice pudding in literature", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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