
This is an oldie that I wrote for my beloved pup, Cuchulainn. He came to me when I lived in Belfast in the 1990s. He never left.
CuchulainnYour eyes close off
the fireplace, the lights, and me
as you rest your head heavily on my thigh;
your big, black paw, on my knee.
Will your sleeping mind's eye,
the record-keeper of every sound and smell of time,
recall our ancestors' meeting--
the treaty between people and the wild--
when you first came to the fire?
What were the terms of domestication?
Who growled at whom?
Did you take the best place by the fire then, too,
or did you earn it by degrees?
What did they and you expect those early nights
of our good posture?
We lost all sense of outdoors with your coming in.
You who would be known to every living thing by your
smell, sound, and sight will not share the knowledge
your fine nose finds in our leaves, rocks, and trees.
Nor do we understand the crooked paths you take,
The invisible potions in which you roll your delighted body,
Or the back-scratching pine trees that keep your toys.
Keeper of ancient secrets, you let us go on in our building of fires.
We give your our own bed, too,
Though you would take it, anyway.
Through you we glimpse the world with our kindest vocabulary:
Puppy, pet, protector, friend.
I feel it in my thigh.
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