A Dreaming Dog
A poem I wrote when my beloved dog Shulky died of old age.

That was some years back.
These days, with my hair sprouting like dry tendrils of grass, I'm more circumspect. When called, I lift my head inquiringly, more often than not. More often than not I find that I had been quite right. In not going running. To the called command. My days of nimble running are over. And done with. As you've probably gathered -
I'm getting on in years, some.
These days, I go out, with a lumbering gait, and sit in the corner of the garden - The corner that gets the first cool breeze - Under the stunted Laburnum tree - Spraying the sky with golden yellow flowering sprigs. And I look at the egg yolk moon. And something in my now sluggish blood stirs.
A howl swirls in my throat and dies.
I read instead the messages being sung - A crescendo of speaking voices from my kith and my kin. Kinfolk all, with singing voices. Singing a symphony in the great opera house. The moon listens too in a yellow hush - And weaves amongst the stars - And suddenly gets caught in the entangled branches of the stunted Laburnum tree.
And the yolk runs fluid all over the dry ash sky.
Summer is here. I lift my nostrils and sniff the air - Not a whisper of a breeze. All is still. The bald earth throbs below with the heat. The sun has gone down but has left behind his pulsing heartbeat. My eyes close shut.
And I doze in a liquid yellow dream.
From far, far away I hear a voice call - "Shulky" - A well-known voice from the liquid yellow room behind. And my heart fills with the dry ash of the night and the quiet. My bones are heavy and tired - My breath labored - My eyes dimmed. It is time to rest.
I try to tell that familiar voice calling me.
Again - "Shulky" - And though I feel a presence beside me - The voice sounds as if from far, far away. A long, long distance away. The great journey has begun. And it is time to carry on dreaming the dream.
The never-ending dream of a dreaming dog.
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