A Culinary Puzzle

By Ellis Parker Butler

    In our dainty little kitchen,     Where my aproned wife is queen     Over all the tin-pan people,     In a realm exceeding clean,     Oft I like to loiter, watching     While she mixes things for tea;     And she tasks me, slyly smiling,     “Now just guess what this will be!”     Hidden in a big blue apron,     Her dimpled arms laid bare,     And the love-smiles coyly mingling     With a housewife’s frown of care     See her beat a golden batter,     Pausing but to ask of me,     As she adds a bit of butter,     “Now just guess what this will be!”     Then I bravely do my duty,     Guess it, “pudding,” “cake” or “pie,”     “Dumplings,” “waffles,” “bread” or “muffins;”     But no matter what I try,     This provoking witch just answers:     “Never mind, just wait and see!     But I think you should be able,     Dear, to guess what this will be.”     Little fraud! she never tells me     Until ’tis baked and browned     And I think I know the reason     For her secrecy profound     She herself with all her fine airs     And her books on cookery,     Could not answer, should I ask her,     “Dearest, what will that mess be?”

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Poem Details

Language: English
Keywords: Public Domain
Source: Public Domain Collection
Rights/Permissions: Public Domain

Analysis & Notes:
This poem is a witty exploration of the dynamic between a husband and wife in the domestic sphere, where the wife wields control over the kitchen and the husband is left to guess the outcome of her culinary creations. The poem's structure, with its consistent eight-syllable lines and repeating rhyme scheme, creates a sense of playful domesticity, underscoring the lighthearted and teasing nature of the exchange. The use of onomatopoeic words like beat and browned adds to the sensory experience, immersing the reader in the scene. A structural turn occurs when the husband's guesses are met with the wife's coy refusal to reveal the outcome, only to be proven correct when the dish is finally presented. This shift in power dynamics is skillfully conveyed through the wife's subtle yet firm responses, which belie a deeper vulnerability in her inability to provide a definitive answer. The final line, with its question about the wife's own uncertainty, adds a layer of complexity to the poem, suggesting that even the wife's confidence in her culinary abilities may be a facade.

Understanding Limerick

A limerick is a five-line poem known for its jaunty rhythm, playful tone, and a punchline twist. It’s built for humor—often sly, sometimes downright silly.


Common characteristics of limericks:

  • Five Lines & Rhyme: The standard scheme is AABBA—the first, second, and fifth lines rhyme; the shorter third and fourth lines rhyme with each other.
  • Bouncy Meter: Typically anapestic (two short, one long beat). Lines 1, 2, and 5 are longer; lines 3 and 4 are shorter.
  • Tone & Humor: Lighthearted, mischievous, and built around a final gag or reversal.
  • Subject & Setup: Often starts with “There once was a … from …,” setting place and character before the comic turn.
  • Sound Play: Internal rhyme, alliteration, and rhythmic snap heighten the joke’s delivery.

The best limericks land like a good toast: quick, musical, and clinched by a memorable last line.