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  This week: Dances with DogsEdited by: Quizmo LaGrande   More Newsletters By This Editor
  
 
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 1. About this Newsletter
 2. A Word from our Sponsor
 3. Letter from the Editor
 4. Editor's Picks
 5. A Word from Writing.Com
 6. Ask & Answer
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 | "The dog is a yes-animal, very popular with people who can't afford to keep a yes-man."  ~Robertson Davies 
 
 Dancing DogJohn Mcmair
 
 My doggy likes to disco dance.
 He boogies every night.
 He dances in his doghouse
 till the early morning light.
 
 The other dogs come running
 when they hear my doggy swing.
 A few will play their instruments.
 The others dance and sing.
 
 They pair off with their partners
 as their tails begin to wag.
 They love to do the bunny hop,
 the fox trot and the shag.
 
 You'll see the doghouse rockin'
 as a hundred dogs or more
 all trip the light fantastic
 on the doghouse disco floor.
 
 At last, at dawn, they exit
 in the early morning breeze,
 and stop to sniff the fire hydrants,
 bushes, lawns and trees.
 
 I just don't understand it
 for although it looks like fun.
 I can't see how they fit inside
 that doghouse built for one.
 
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 | I don't know why it is, but I have a huge soft spot for animals, pets, but dogs in particular. Dogs have always been a huge part of my life. Seems I've always had a four-footed best friend with me everywhere I go. 
 These past couple of years, my trusty Ado Annie, a gorgeous white German Shepherd, has been my constant companion. I'm a bit of a loner, so on our recent journeys cross-country, she not only protects (and a fine job she does) and keeps me company, but she agrees with almost everything I say, likes the same music, and doesn't even mind my banjo playing or ear-splitting attempts at yodeling-heck, she even tries to sing along! Wish I could say the same for some of my fellas.
 
 But alas, dogs don't live as long as us, and if you're a dog lover, I'm sure you'll agree the most painful thing in the world is to let one go. I am devastated for weeks. No matter that my brain understands and accepts the passage, and I know it was all good and as it should be, my heart, which honored and loved that dog so dang much, just doesn't listen and I can't turn off the water-works.
 
 And ain't it the truth, you swear you'll never get another dog cause you know your broken heart will never mend and you could never possibly survive another shattering? But your it does heal, and the magic is that your heart gets BIGGER, though you don't realize it until... those big brown eyes lock on to yours and in a instant... in one god-to-dog instant, you're hooked and you've got yourself another hound.
 
 And once again, you do the dance.
 
 In honor of our furry friends, let's waltz through some differing points of the canine perspective, poetically speaking, that is.
 
 Here are two fabulous pieces by U.S. Poet Laureate, Billy Collins:
 
 
 A Dog on his MasterBilly Collins
 
 As young as I look,
 I am growing older faster than he,
 seven to one
 is the ratio they tend to say.
 
 Whatever the number,
 I will pass him one day
 and take the lead
 the way I do on our walks in the woods.
 
 And if this ever manages
 to cross his mind,
 it would be the sweetest
 shadow I have ever cast on snow or grass.
 
 The Revenant
 Billy Collins
 
 I am the dog you put to sleep,
 as you like to call the needle of oblivion,
 come back to tell you this simple thing:
 I never liked you--not one bit.
 
 When I licked your face,
 I thought of biting off your nose.
 When I watched you toweling yourself dry,
 I wanted to leap and unman you with a snap.
 
 I resented the way you moved,
 your lack of animal grace,
 the way you would sit in a chair to eat,
 a napkin on your lap, knife in your hand.
 
 I would have run away,
 but I was too weak, a trick you taught me
 while I was learning to sit and heel,
 and--greatest of insults--shake hands without a hand.
 
 I admit the sight of the leash
 would excite me
 but only because it meant I was about
 to smell things you had never touched.
 
 You do not want to believe this,
 but I have no reason to lie.
 I hated the car, the rubber toys,
 disliked your friends and, worse, your relatives.
 
 The jingling of my tags drove me mad.
 You always scratched me in the wrong place.
 All I ever wanted from you
 was food and fresh water in my metal bowls.
 
 While you slept, I watched you breathe
 as the moon rose in the sky.
 It took all of my strength
 not to raise my head and howl.
 
 Now I am free of the collar,
 the yellow raincoat, monogrammed sweater,
 the absurdity of your lawn,
 and that is all you need to know about this place
 
 except what you already supposed
 and are glad it did not happen sooner--
 
 that everyone here can read and write,
 the dogs in poetry, the cats and the others in prose.
 * * *
 
 A grieving master thoughts... (might want to grab a tissue!)
 
 
 LoyalWilliam Matthews
 
 They gave him an overdose
 of anesthetic, and its fog
 shut down his heart in seconds.
 I tried to hold him, but he was
 somewhere else. For so much love
 one of the principals is missing,
 it's no wonder we confuse love
 with longing. Oh I was thick
 with both. I wanted my dog
 to live forever and while I was
 working on impossibilities
 I wanted to live forever, too.
 I wanted company and to be alone.
 I wanted to know how they trash
 a stiff ninety-five-pound dog
 and I paid them to do it
 and not tell me. What else?
 I wanted a letter of apology
 delivered by decrepit hand,
 by someone shattered for each time
 I'd had to eat pure pain. I wanted
 to weep, not "like a baby,"
 in gulps and breath-stretching
 howls, but steadily, like an adult,
 according to the fiction
 that there is work to be done,
 and almost inconsolably.
 from Selected Poems and Translations 1969-1991, 1992
 Houghton Mifflin, New York, NY
* * *
 
 Then of course, not everyone loves dogs. Here's a cute ditty by Judith Viorst
 
 Mother Doesn't Want a Dog
 
 Mother doesn't want a dog.
 Mother says they smell,
 And never sit when you say sit,
 Or even when you yell.
 And when you come home late at night
 And there is ice and snow,
 You have to go back out because
 The dumb dog has to go.
 
 Mother doesn't want a dog.
 Mother says they shed,
 And always let the strangers in
 And bark at friends instead,
 And do disgraceful things on rugs,
 And track mud on the floor,
 And flop upon your bed at night
 And snore their doggy snore.
 
 Mother doesn't want a dog.
 She's making a mistake.
 Because, more than a dog, I think
 She will not want this snake.
 * * *
 May all you dances be filled with joy--
 Love and peace to you and all your furry friends!
 | 
 
 
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 | Don't put your tissues away yet. I love these wonderful heartfelt pieces by our own WDC poets. 
 
 |  |  | Flapper  (E) Flapper was my first dog.  I was 5 when we got her and she lived to be 19.
 #1026231 by Ssarra
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 Have an opinion on what you've read here today? Then send the Editor feedback! Find an item that you think would be perfect for showcasing here? Submit it for consideration in the newsletter!
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 | Stephanie Grace  kindly sent in her comments on last month's edition: 
 
 Thank you for an uplifting newsletter and for the reminder to look to nature (except for me right now --Summer makes me depressed.).  
 Your suggestion to write down things we appreciate reminded me of a website that I really should get active in again so I thought I would share it with you: graceinsmallthings.com
 Thank you, Stephanie, for the lead to the lovely website.  You might also like to look into GratitudeLog.com. Perhaps you can try posting all the nice things about summer, no matter how small, to help keep you on the sunny side. Better yet, why don't you write us a poem!?
  * * *
 
 G. B. Williams
  writes: 
 You started your newsletter off with one of my favorite poems, and quickly got my interest.  I have also written a poem about trees because I do so like trees and nature.  I also believe that we should take the time to smell the roses, taste the coffee, feel the breeze, and yes, appreciate the beauty of trees.  Thanks for sharing.
 I'm so glad I got  GB's attention. I peeked in her port, and yup, our girl sure does like trees...
 
 I particularly like this line: I like trees because they never attempt to be anything but trees.
 Thanks, GB!
 * * *
 
 Here's a little gift in appreciation from embe
  : 
 Thank you for the lovely newsletter, sharing my poem of nature with you -
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* * *
 And thanks to Quick-Quill
  riding the welcome wagon: 
 Glad to have you in the PACNW. I am in Portland! Lived in Tacoma for a few months. We're neighbors! Yay! Nice to know there are "kindred" spirits nearby. It's so beautiful up here... totally awe inspiring!
  
 
 
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