Here's a Dog
by David O'Meara
Here's the
dog I remember most: Its hind legs were gone, both
of them; and
in their place, artless clumps of gnarled-up bone, and space.
Not
that it seemed to notice much - we watched it literally haul its
ass
across the dusty compound, front paws and pistoned legs below
the deadly concentration
- almost placed expression - of that whiskered
untragic snout.
Nothing was strange. Green hills sat where they
had the night before
and the river we were bound for sashayed in
wide crescents south-east
toward Chiang Rai. A monk was having his
head shaved in the sun.
The birth, bus wheel, or unmarked land-mine
that tore the flesh away, crude
as fate, seemed mistaken, wasted,
or dumb
to grace its meaning there, in the alien unenterable mind
of that mutt.
David
O'Meara currently lives in Ottawa, Ontario where he is working on
a new collection of poems. His first book is called "Storm
still," which is reviewed in this issue.
THIS
WORK IS COPYRIGHT OF THE AUTHOR.
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