Knives and forks
It's just past 5 a.m. on an early-waking Sunday and when this happens, there's something on my mind. Actually about fifty things, if you count every piece of our old silverplated cutlery. After thirty-three years, it is looking not shabby chic, just shabby.
Last week, I ordered a replacement, a similar design but in stainless steel, because I've tired of polishing forks after every salad. It has taken me at least three years to do it. For a while, I thought of replacing the rattiest pieces, but the pattern, Christofle's "Chinon" was discontinued in 2016, and vintage pieces are usually as worn as mine. Another option, re-plating, is never as durable as the original finish, and I'd still be polishing.
The flatware holds memories of family supper at six, weekend dinner parties at eight. I see Patrick sticking a leftover lobster in his jacket pocket, sweet little Daniel politely saying, "I'm not very hungry" and then polishing off thirds. Our beloved cat dragged off a teaspoon we didn't find until we moved house twenty years later.
Now the forks' tines are worn down to the brass; patina has degraded to worn-out.
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| Couldn't be brassed? |
The knives are dull, little better than cutting with a spoon.
I remember buying it, visiting the store one winter afternoon with a five-year-old son, his hand in mine. He was game for the outing, knowing it would conclude with hot chocolate under its whipped-cream dome. Children are not preferred visitors to china stores, but he stood with arms welded to his sides, surveying the glittering shelves with only big blue eyes. The saleswoman, normally aloof, melted and said, "Keep them like that as long as you can."
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| New set: Stainless steel, Made In |
As I placed the order for the stainless, I wondered, How long will we use this? It should, as my Dad would say, "see me out". The table on which it will lay is smaller, the menu lighter— dessert is not de rigeur. Moving to stainless seems a small default, but I still have my mother's elegant wedding silver, stored in flannel rolls. When the new stuff came, Le Duc said he liked it; I thought, Nice but too new.
What is more elemental to a home than cutlery, witnesses to the dual purpose of meals: sustenance and connection? When we touch it, we're touching those closest to us.
One of our sons eagerly accepted the old silverplate (he's a deeply sentimental guy)—and I kept two place settings to use occasionally. The plating may have dimmed, but the memories remain bright.




Comments
M Proust says something similar right before the famous madeleine passage: "I feel that there is much to be said for the Celtic belief that the souls of those whom we have lost are held captive in some inferior being, in an animal, in a plant, in some inanimate object, and so effectively lost to us until the day (which to many never comes) when we happen to pass by the tree or to obtain possession of the object which forms their prison. Then they start and tremble, they call us by our name, and as soon as we have recognised their voice the spell is broken. We have delivered them: they have overcome death and return to share our life."
I remember, many years ago, I was killing time in a major city with a colleague who was about to retire from her successful career. We went into a famous tableware shop and were admiring the solid silver cutlery displayed in cabinets there. Suddenly, my colleague said that she had always wanted solid silver cutlery and could think of no better time than retirement to buy it. I was a bit taken aback, but this was a mature woman of substantial means and a mind of her own, so I spent the next hour enjoying helping her to decide which design to order. She then committed to the truly eye-watering price for 8 settings and paid the substantial deposit. We left the shop, and went to the airport to get our flight home. Sitting in the lounge over a couple of large gins, she told me she had only gone to that shop because I was with her and she thought she could rely on me to be sensible and rein her in. I told her she'd got entirely the wrong woman for that job...
On a practical note, we also have the Made In flatware and like it. Enjoy!
My only regret is that the company I bought from does not have an open stock option like Arthur Price.