The Refuge of a Kitchen
Saturday, September 29, 2012 at 10:24PM The British-born poet W.H. Auden died on this date in 1973. During the years that Auden lived with his domestic partner, Chester Kallman, the task of cooking was in Kallman’s able hands. When the couple got into a spat, the kitchen sometimes became a storm cellar — the place where Kallman escaped Auden’s fury. “Once when [W.H.] was thundery about some minor transgression,” recalled a friend of the couple, “I saw Chester retreat to stir the soup five times during the conversation.”
On another occasion, Kallman had forgotten to complete an errand for Auden, and the poet became angry. “He was furious,” said Kallman. “I fled into the kitchen until the clouds passed. Kitchens are a great invention.”
mark & matthew | Comments Off | 

