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Tea Rooms
by Norman Fulkerson
What impressed me were the details, those
little touches that created an ambience and put me at ease. Here
was a calm spot away from the crowded fast-food places, where one
is not an anonymous person dashing down a meal.
"Take your time," my waitress said
as she removed my plate, leaving just the elegant teacup in place.
I calmly finished sipping my tea and continued pondering the scene
around me. No, it wasn't England or even close to it, I'll grant
you. But it did take a little adjusting to realize that here I was,
having afternoon tea in a tearoom-in rural Pennsylvania.
The place was called "The Black Rose,"
not without a little touch of Victorian splendor. I must admit that
the sight of it piqued my interest as I passed through the semi-industrial
town of Hanover. It was a pleasant surprise-an oasis amid the noisy
and frantic rhythm of daily life.
I was even more surprised to hear that I
would not be alone in enjoying my afternoon tea. Tearooms like the
Black Rose are becoming very popular all across the United States.
Hundreds are sprouting up in the most unlikely places.
Tearooms in the land of fast-food! Such an
incongruity! Only in America, I thought.
It is not as if tea is not popular here.
After all, aside from plain water, tea is the most widely consumed
beverage in the world and is found in almost eighty percent of American
households. According to the Tea Council of the U.S.A., on any given
day nearly 127 million people-half of all Americans-drink tea. But
in these tranquil tearoom retreats, one finds much more than just
a beverage competing with water. One finds a way of life.
I decided to investigate the Black Rose to
see if I could find out more. When I called to arrange for tea I
was told that the waiting list for Saturday tea is four weeks. A
quick sigh of relief was my response, since I was considering a
weekday. "It would still be good to call a day ahead to make
sure there is an opening," was the friendly response on the
other end of the line.
In our industrialized world, accustomed to
eating on the run, where time is money, it would appear that people
want a little more out of life. That is exactly what owner Helen
Widdowson seeks to give them with her establishment.
Having spent eight years in Germany, she
is impressed by the difference of life in Europe. She liked those
"third" kind of places outside the home and the workplace
where people can get together for leisurely conversation. Apparently
she wasn't the only one looking for such retreats. After just eighteen
months of operation, she is already considering expanding her tearoom,
and with good reason, for business is booming.
Who goes to the tearoom? Nearly everyone,
it seems. Mrs. Widdowson's clients are not mere eccentric Anglophiles
but pretty much a cross section of the local population-businessmen,
housewives, even teenagers. It is a trend mirrored in other tearooms
across the country.
"Why do they come and what motivated
you to open a tearoom?" I asked Mrs. Widdowson.
"Our country is uncivil today. People
don't talk because we live in a fast-paced world where everything
is packaged and instant. People are searching for civility in their
lives," she replied.
Indeed, there is something about the atmosphere
that imparts that exact impression. Observing a couple of ladies
nearby, I sensed a refreshing cordiality.
"They're under a lot of stress,"
she continued, "working too many hours. A tea break works because
it's deliberate. It causes you to slow down and focus on some other
person or on yourself. The experience of tea is about relationships."
Yes, whom will I take next time I go?
In nearby Gettysburg, the Thistlefields English
Tearoom goes even further. Authenticity reaches the point that you
will occasionally see modern Victorians wearing period clothing,
complete with hats and gloves. Afternoon tea there is a serious
affair.
Amateur theatrics, one might think, yet it
appears to be something more. Tea speaks to the soul. It calls to
mind principles that seem so distant.
The Bigham House Bed and Breakfast in Holmes,
Ohio, for example, invites prospective guests to "an authentic
English Tea Room in Grand Victorian Style," where they can
"step back in time to a bygone era of Victorian elegance and
charm."
At the Devon Tea Room in the quaint Cape
Cod village of West Dennis, Massachusetts, a similar spirit reigns.
"It is exciting...to see that all over America, people are
discovering or rediscovering the pleasures of tea," claims
the tearoom's promotional literature. "For many, a traditional
afternoon tea party brings back wonderful memories."
At the very aptly named Magnolia and Ivy
Tearoom in the "good ole South," in Plains, Georgia, Terri
Eager not only manages the shop but also teaches others all over
the country how to open their own tearooms. She says that people,
including teenagers, visit her three shops because "they don't
feel comfortable with the cyber-future." She not only serves
tea, but for those who feel they need a bit of polishing, she offers
a variety of etiquette classes: "Tea Etiquette," "Children's
Etiquette and Dining," and "Corporate Etiquette,"
trained and certified by the Protocol School of Washington.
Perhaps that is the whole secret of the
tearoom. Amid the triumphant vulgarity of an increasingly egalitarian
world and the noisy, frantic, and hurly-burly pace of daily life,
tradition appears as an elevated rest for the soul. It represents
good sense, good breeding, good order, and the art of living wisely.
For this reason, even a distant tradition
from England can find sympathy. It explains why some Americans have
a penchant for all things English. Despite its censurable romantic
aspects, the Victorian archetype has its restful attractions that
temper our fast-paced modernity. We long for the thatched cottages,
the English gardens, and the picturesque hamlets popularized by
American artist Thomas Kinkaid. Such themes are typically found
in Victoria magazine, for example, which regularly treats its nearly
975,000 monthly readers to features from this not-so-bygone era.
Above all, such trends serve to stress how
people need tradition-especially our Christian tradition. Tradition
is not just the past but an indispensable element that must rule
the present. It keeps equality from sweeping away all refinement
and enthroning vulgarity. It prevents freedom from serving as a
pretext for chaos and depravity. Without tradition, the fast pace
of technology enslaves man by turning him into a machine. Only tradition
provides that mysterious something that makes life meaningful, human,
and bearable.
While casually sipping my tea at the Black
Rose, I could not help but feel that I had been denied something
very special for too long. Yet I was comforted by the realization
that I was not alone. The story has it that a long time ago there
was a young English girl who was also denied the special delight
of having a leisurely cup of tea. When she grew up and made a name
for herself in this world, when people recognized her as somebody,
one of the first things she did -- after her coronation as Queen
Victoria of England -- was order a cup of tea.
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