OT: The Cat, A Poem
She came to me skittish, wild. The way you're meant to be, surrounded by cruelty. I did not blame her. I would do the same. A pregnant cat, a happy distraction; some sort of normal thing. Calico and innocent. The kittens in her belly said feed me. And I did. She crept with careful eye, Body held low to the dirt, Snagged a bite, And carried it just far enough away. She liked the MREs, the beef stew, the chicken breast, the barbeque pork, but she did not like canned sardines. I do not blame her. I would do the same. She came around again and again finally deciding that I was no threat, that this big man wasn't so bad. I was afraid to touch her as the docs warned us. Iraqi animals were carriers of flesh-eating disease. I donned a plastic glove and was the first to pet this wild creature who may be the one true heart and mind that America had won over. After a while I forgot the glove and enjoyed the tactile softness of short fur, flesh-eating bacteria be damned. Her belly swelled for weeks and she disappeared for some days until her kittens were safely birthed in the shallow of a rusted desk in the ruins that lined the road behind us. She came around again slim with afterbirth still matted to her hind legs. She would return, but not quite as often. She came to eat and for attention, but there was nursing to be done. One day she crept up with a kitten in her mouth. She dropped it at my foot and stared up at me; she expected something, but there was nothing I could do. The young black and white kitten was dead, its eyes not yet opened. It looked like some shriveled old wise thing, completely still, mouth puckered, small body curled and limp. She let me take the baby without a fight. She knew, but seemed unaffected. She had fetched me a gift, a lesson, among the worried nights, shot nerves from poorly aimed mortar rounds: Everything dies. The evil, the innocent, her baby and me. I thought I should say a prayer and bury this poor little thing, but I did for it what will be done for me. I laid it in the burn can amongst the ash and said I'm sorry. Susan J. DuBose ^..^ www.petgirlspetsitting.com www.tx.siameserescue.org www.shadowcats.net The storm can't down the castle, it can only shift the stones.
Re: OT: The Cat, A Poem
This poem was written by Ryan Alexander, a former Marine, while he was serving in Mosul, Iraq. He recited it on N.P.R. this morning. It is from a collection of poetry in a book entitled Operation Homecoming. On Jul 4, 2007, at 6:04 PM, Susan Dubose wrote: She came to me skittish, wild. The way you're meant to be, surrounded by cruelty. I did not blame her. I would do the same. A pregnant cat, a happy distraction; some sort of normal thing. Calico and innocent. The kittens in her belly said feed me. And I did. She crept with careful eye, Body held low to the dirt, Snagged a bite, And carried it just far enough away. She liked the MREs, the beef stew, the chicken breast, the barbeque pork, but she did not like canned sardines. I do not blame her. I would do the same. She came around again and again finally deciding that I was no threat, that this big man wasn't so bad. I was afraid to touch her as the docs warned us. Iraqi animals were carriers of flesh-eating disease. I donned a plastic glove and was the first to pet this wild creature who may be the one true heart and mind that America had won over. After a while I forgot the glove and enjoyed the tactile softness of short fur, flesh-eating bacteria be damned. Her belly swelled for weeks and she disappeared for some days until her kittens were safely birthed in the shallow of a rusted desk in the ruins that lined the road behind us. She came around again slim with afterbirth still matted to her hind legs. She would return, but not quite as often. She came to eat and for attention, but there was nursing to be done. One day she crept up with a kitten in her mouth. She dropped it at my foot and stared up at me; she expected something, but there was nothing I could do. The young black and white kitten was dead, its eyes not yet opened. It looked like some shriveled old wise thing, completely still, mouth puckered, small body curled and limp. She let me take the baby without a fight. She knew, but seemed unaffected. She had fetched me a gift, a lesson, among the worried nights, shot nerves from poorly aimed mortar rounds: Everything dies. The evil, the innocent, her baby and me. I thought I should say a prayer and bury this poor little thing, but I did for it what will be done for me. I laid it in the burn can amongst the ash and said I'm sorry. Susan J. DuBose ^..^ www.petgirlspetsitting.com www.tx.siameserescue.org www.shadowcats.net The storm can't down the castle, it can only shift the stones.
Re: OT: The Cat, A Poem
Yes, that's where I heard it. you can log onto www.npr.org , go to Books and listen to him recite it. made me cry... Susan J. DuBose ^..^ www.PetGirlsPetsitting.com www.Tx.SiameseRescue.org www.shadowcats.net As Cleopatra lay in state, Faithful Bast at her side did wait, Purring welcomes of soft applause, Ever guarding with sharpened claws. Trajan Tennent - Original Message - From: Jane Lyons To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org Sent: Wednesday, July 04, 2007 5:24 PM Subject: Re: OT: The Cat, A Poem This poem was written by Ryan Alexander, a former Marine, while he was serving in Mosul, Iraq. He recited it on N.P.R. this morning. It is from a collection of poetry in a book entitled Operation Homecoming. On Jul 4, 2007, at 6:04 PM, Susan Dubose wrote: She came to me skittish, wild. The way you're meant to be, surrounded by cruelty. I did not blame her. I would do the same. A pregnant cat, a happy distraction; some sort of normal thing. Calico and innocent. The kittens in her belly said feed me. And I did. She crept with careful eye, Body held low to the dirt, Snagged a bite, And carried it just far enough away. She liked the MREs, the beef stew, the chicken breast, the barbeque pork, but she did not like canned sardines. I do not blame her. I would do the same. She came around again and again finally deciding that I was no threat, that this big man wasn't so bad. I was afraid to touch her as the docs warned us. Iraqi animals were carriers of flesh-eating disease. I donned a plastic glove and was the first to pet this wild creature who may be the one true heart and mind that America had won over. After a while I forgot the glove and enjoyed the tactile softness of short fur, flesh-eating bacteria be damned. Her belly swelled for weeks and she disappeared for some days until her kittens were safely birthed in the shallow of a rusted desk in the ruins that lined the road behind us. She came around again slim with afterbirth still matted to her hind legs. She would return, but not quite as often. She came to eat and for attention, but there was nursing to be done. One day she crept up with a kitten in her mouth. She dropped it at my foot and stared up at me; she expected something, but there was nothing I could do. The young black and white kitten was dead, its eyes not yet opened. It looked like some shriveled old wise thing, completely still, mouth puckered, small body curled and limp. She let me take the baby without a fight. She knew, but seemed unaffected. She had fetched me a gift, a lesson, among the worried nights, shot nerves from poorly aimed mortar rounds: Everything dies. The evil, the innocent, her baby and me. I thought I should say a prayer and bury this poor little thing, but I did for it what will be done for me. I laid it in the burn can amongst the ash and said I'm sorry. Susan J. DuBose ^..^ www.petgirlspetsitting.com www.tx.siameserescue.org www.shadowcats.net The storm can't down the castle, it can only shift the stones.