Evening Lilac
-
Evening Lilac It’s evening now. Outside my windowthe breeze has begun to
gather the perfumeof lilacs after their slow afternoonin the sun, pushing
air over...
Showing posts with label cats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cats. Show all posts
Saturday, October 22, 2016
On saying goodbye (when does death arrive?)
The morning arrives still, grey, humid. Offshore the sea blusters with a coming storm, but here the water is a claude glass, the air full of black flies. We swat them away as we walk out past the woodpile, up the slight incline to the barn, then along what used to be a fence line to the apple orchard. The apples aren't any sweeter, but they are redder, and some have begun to fall on the ground.
Past the weedy patch and the mound where the rhubarb grows, past the gangling burr oak with its few clinging brown leaves and then we are there beneath a birch and some spruces: our own private pet cemetery. We stop there briefly to speak to all our gone ones: in 17 years, the litany of names has become very long. Four dogs and now three cats and the ghost of a fourth haunt this grove, this section of stony earth. Enya, the new dog, who is almost two, sniffs the spot worriedly and then moves on, quickly, down the path to the pond. It is not a good place for living dogs to linger.
We buried our cat Dante there last week, after taking her to the vet for an overdose of sedative. In seconds, her poor stricken body, her paralyzed bent paws and stiff legs, the blind eyes and nictitating membranes that would not close relaxed. She bowed her head as if in sleep and all of the tension drained from her body. Her heart stopped and she was dead.
Sad as we were, as we watched her unfurl into death, we were also relieved, for her pain had become unbearable; despite her paralysis, she had tried again and again to run from what ailed her, only to fall, and her misery to worsen.
We'd had 17 years with her, our "big cat" as I called her, although she had always been small. Still, in the last year, as her kidneys failed, she had become tiny; two weeks ago, her legs weakened and began to stiffen. When I said goodbye to her on my way out the door to work that week, I thought it might be the last time I saw her.
She stopped drinking and eating that day, and because she kept falling, Marike took to carrying her around on a blanket or in her basket. She held Dante all night the Tuesday that I was in Halifax, and then when I came home Wednesday I did the same. We thought she died quite a bit that night, but was clearly still in pain. Mostly blind, mostly paralyzed, organs failing, her extremities--paws and ears--cold, only her tail still lively, impatient, expressive, switching and twitching, we bundled her in a blanket and took her to the vet, where a needle full of sedative slowly stilled her heart.
But is that when death arrives, when the heart stops or the autonomic nervous system ceases? Or does it settle in by degrees, as we who are living also let go, and the beloved body cools and stiffens?
I held Dante in my arms and petted her all the way home, speaking softly into that near space where it seemed her spirit, her particular character and being still hovered, touchable, keeping us company. We had not yet released our hold on her singular life, but what had been so lively and so alive without us now remained and shifted inward, circulating as memory and sensation and drifts of kitty fur, sewn through the cushions and corners of our lives.
In this way, she is not yet gone, but nestled into the forms of our gestures and habits. At night, in the dark, I still step carefully, as if she might be nearby, unseen, underfoot--as, in a way, she is. When I wake, I listen for her, sure I'll hear the drop of her paws on the floorboards, her soft purr as she climbs up on the bed, glad to have conscious company in the middle of the night. I put out my hand, curl my fingers around empty space. Likewise the dog curls on the bench by the fire, nuzzling a stuffed toy, sniffing at it as she did Dante, clearly missing her animal companion.
How does Rilke put it, the character of such missing and the way it shapes our lives? In the Eighth Duino Elegy he writes:
Here all is distance;
there it was breath. After that first home,
the second seems ambiguous and drafty...
Who has twisted us around like this, so that
no matter what we do, we are in the posture
of someone going away? Just as, upon
the farthest hill, which shows him his whole valley
one last time, he turns, stops lingers------,
so we live here, forever taking leave.
So we live here, forever taking leave of our loves--until the days that we, too, will die.
Unlike Rilke, I do not think that we live or die differently from other animals, although he might be right that we tend to busy ourselves with preoccupations, with objects, as he puts it, rather than "that pure space into which flowers endlessly open." But now and then, as death creases us, we too may turn or wake and look, not at life, but at something like being, as its wings beat by our heads. These too are gifts, as if from the dead to the living: look here; see; and hasten not your mourning.
Notes
Dante cat died on Thursday 13 October 2016. She had come to live with us when just a kitten sometime in the fall of 1999, a gift of Nicole Moser, who had heard we needed a mouser. We had two large black dogs at the time, Negrita, a black lab, and Binky, our three-legged wolfdog stray. Dante spent her first three days in the house on top of the kitchen cupboards; on the fourth day she descended, having somehow mesmerized the dogs, and despite her tiny size, whipped them into respect and obedience without ever extending a claw. In fact, that's how she got her name, for as Marike said, she was little, and needed a big name that was easy to hear and to call. Who better than after an exiled poet, who mapped heaven and hell and all of the regions between?
She was wise, scrappy, playful and clever--gave birth to five kittens, instructed Binky how to care for them rather than to eat them, and survived a neighbour's hate and traps, as well as an attack by roaming huskies that killed her daughter and wounded Elisabeth. Until a year ago, she kept the house free of mice and other small critters; she trained all of our dogs to be good to cats, and figured out that if she came and rubbed herself on our computers as we worked, she could be sure of nearly endless petting. She could play good jokes, sticking her paw in our water glasses, or dropping pellets of food in our shoes, and then watching to see how we'd react. And sometimes, when we played ball with a dog, she'd run interference, as if she could catch, but really to interrupt the dog's concentration, and make the ball drop. We'll not soon see her like again.
The Rilke I cite here is from Stephen Mitchell's translation and bilingual edition, Selected Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke (New York: Random House, 1982): 195, 197.
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
How cold my knees are/ heartwreck/ a love poem
Early morning. Pink light at the window. The cat, curled on the pillow beside me wakes when I do, gently taps my face with her paw. The furnace cycles on again. I must get up and put wood on the fire. The walls of the house creak with cold.
I draw the curtains, let in the sun, build up the fire, sweep ash and wood fragments into the boiler, turn up the thermostats. Time for coffee. An eagle, carried on an air current, dashes across the sky.
How lovely the light is, how cold my knees are. How age or winter undoes me, piercing my bones. It wrecks my heart to wake here without you.
Labels:
aging,
cats,
fire,
love stories,
morning,
visible poetry,
winter
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Hurt birds (on the politics of blame)
I wake from a dream in which small birds are fluttering into my hands. They are the size of finches, but coloured in blues and rusts and creams, as if they were swallows. I place each bird on a scarred round wooden table beneath a tall window and they gather in a huddle. It is cold. We seem to be at one end of a large library: musty volumes line the walls and the space is hushed and dark. Outside, it is winter, and bare branches scratch at the window. One detail stays with me as I wake--just before setting down each bird, I pluck a few feathers from its wings. This seems to frighten them, and hurt them; I do not know why I do it. Waking more fully, I realize that the cat is asleep on my chest. This has happened to me before--am I having her dreams again? She lifts her head and blinks at me.
No, let me own my own cruelty. I should not blame it on the cat.
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Always Waiting
Waiting to be let in
waiting to be let out--
what difference does it make?
I am always waiting
(if I feign sleep don't
let that fool you).
I am the watcher
a being-awake
sleepless, standing ground,
so you may dream.
Notes
The word "wait," as a substantive, first indicated a watchman, a sentinel, someone awake in the night, even a night musician. Traceable to an Old High German word, wahta, or watchman, guard, a "being awake," the word is also related to the Gothic wakan, to be awake.
The first photo is of my cat, Dante, peering through the window at the yard. The second photo was taken last week on Vernon Street in Halifax, a black cat waiting.
Friday, August 20, 2010
Grief. And Grace
Sudden and sharp, grief cleaves us as if cleanly, but the wound is forever jagged.
You never get over sorrowing after a creature who once clung, closely, to your skin, who huddled in the curve of your hip, who attended your waking and sleeping and sickness and joy. "Nurse kitty," we called her, after her habit of looking after all of us, her closeness, her attentiveness, her insistence on grooming every one of us, licking the hairs of our heads into place.
All of us miss her in acute and particular ways, including her closest friend, dog Bathsheba, who fell into a profound and terrorized depression when Linus died; for days and months it seemed, Sheba sank wearily onto her bed, limbs cracking and creaking. Big sighs: nothing in the world seemed to count anymore. We worried that she might give up too soon, herself, on living.
But here, the end of the summer, and we do all go on, managing now joy and not (always) nightmares. It has taken months for me to muster the courage to tell this story.
I think again and again of the last lines in Toni Morrison's Sula, when one character realizes, years later, just how much she has missed her friend. Sorrow has dogged her, hovered just out of sight, like a little ball, off to one side of her head. But she never turns to look at it. And then one day dead awakens, becomes memory, words, then "not even words. Wishes, longings...A soft ball of fur [breaks] and [scatters] like dandelion spores in the breeze." The loss of her friend Sula presses down upon Nel and she cries out. Morrison's story ends here, with this description of uncontainable grief: "It was a fine cry--loud and long--but it had no bottom and it had no top, just circles and circles of sorrow." Here is something I know--we know--in living with our surviving animals after the trauma of Linus's death: Rilke got it wrong. So too did Levinas. Not only "our eyes are turned backward..." Any animal, and not only humans, is
twisted around like this, so that
no matter what we do, we are in the posture
of someone going away...Just as, upon
the farthest hill, which shows him his whole valley
one last time, he turns, stops, lingers--,
so we live here, forever taking leave.
(Rainer Maria Rilke, Duino Elegies, VIII, trans. Stephen Mitchell)
We all have faces, inward looking eyes; all of us know something of our own mortality. If you doubt this, go sit in a vet's office where animals are daily put to death and watch them, even the most aged and lame, resist crossing the threshold--or else pass, head down, already resigned to the death sentence. Look into the eyes of cattle destined for slaughter and see if you don't recognize there, that "recognition of mortality" Levinas believed was so crucial to having a "face" that could command the ethical imperative, "thou shalt not kill." --But enough of this; already I am off topic. These are arguments for another day. What I wanted to talk about was grief. And grace.
Here, notes from my journal, a sequence of days.
Cats Bees Broken Hearts
12 March 2010
Puerto Escondido, BCS, Mexico
Something worse than the worst thing I can imagine (have ever imagined) happened yesterday morning--Linus was cornered and trapped on our porch by a neighbour's two huskies, who had escaped, and killed. Elisabeth and Sheba witnessed it--Elisabeth's hands hurt as she was trying to get Linus away from the dogs. She kicked them, finally lifted the broken cat body above her head and got her inside. But Linus soon died. Dante cat has disappeared. No one knows if she too was mauled or killed or has just run away in terror. It is cold again in Nova Scotia.
Elisabeth buried Linie with the help of neighbours John and Paulette today; she is under a pile of rocks back by the garden where Binky and Negrita and Tiger are also buried.
Here, the wind blows and we are heartsick. I feel hollow, like an empty broken thing. Fell out of the dinghy and into the water today, I was so upset. Fully clothed in foul weather gear. It does not float. But the water was warm, at least. Our friend Allister, who is visiting for ten days, jumped down into the dinghy and hauled me out of the water, for I was laughing and weeping and couldn't pull myself up. My arms had gone rubbery and useless.
14 March 2010
Isla Carmen, Ballandra Cove
How do you address a sorrow wider than your body and range, a sorrow that rips you open, flays you, empties you of joy? Dante still not found.
We are anchored in Ballandra. Violet flowers scent the night air; the stars come out; the sun rises and the bees come, hunting for water. Northerlies are on the way, but for the moment we're sheltered and resting. A hard sail yesterday--surprisingly high winds on the last tack and we were over-canvassed, boat dogging in short period steep waves. Not a very long trip but I was violently sick, hardly able to hold on, physically or emotionally. I have to find my center, some place where I might hold onto my stomach, but I don't quite know how.
Still waiting for Dante, calling her, calling her in the sleepless nights. I'm exhausted, sick to my stomach. Have to rest. Have to push away the sorrow, develop some other project. I think, I am in Mexico, where calaveras are treasured; I have to make some pompes funebres for my little ones, some ritual offerings, some celebration.
Bees fill the cabin. They are seeking our washcloths. I hang them out, but Marike is made frightened by so many buzzing insects. Each one a potential death sentence. I don't want to kill a single one, so put on gloves, shake the washcloths, drop them into a bag. We light mosquito coils, and bit by bit the bees disperse.
What shall I collect for my precious ones; what toys would delight their souls? I think of flowers and feathers and small shells to bat around. But my arms are empty, my heard afraid. It never occurred to me we could lose both cats in one swoop.
Fear is the field where courage grows. I have not to be afraid to go on living. Well. With joy and warmth and hanging on, as Linus and Dante would do if they could. I imagine holding a kitten, playing. This is not a replacement, but eyes that look back and fur and joy so that I may remember how marvelous life can be. Hope. Fear is the field where courage grows. But where can I find hope? I have not to close my eyes.
The wind comes up
and a dozen buzzards circle in the gap
between mountains, drop;
now ten are lined up on the beach.
They totter along the ground, some flap
their wings, naked red heads pointed seaward.
What sorrow draws you thus,
I want to ask them.
Haven't we walked enough beneath
the shadows of your wings,
dogged by death?
They wait for more
and the wind carries them.
Meanwhile I sit leaden, sorrowing,
too many absent already this year.
The bees land on me
their feet fur soft
I know they would comfort me if I were not afraid of them.
I know they would comfort me if I were not afraid.
Later
Dante emerges from hiding!!!
15 March Benito Juarez Day
Ballandra
Strong northerlies
The bees sip water from every surface:
condensation on the side of a yoghurt container
the residue of dishwater on a cup,
but too much and they drown--
the buckets on the stern accumulate carcasses.
16 March
Ballandra
Hooting northerlies, so still holed up here. One boat left this morning early, after what seemed to be a benign weather forecast. Within half an hour they'd radioed back: northerly winds of 25-30 knots and 5-6 foot swells, on the nose for those of us heading north. We decided to stay put, though in the silent spaces between gusts now and then we'll call out, okay, let's go! as if anyone could get anywhere in a 40-second calm. We sail at anchor in those 30-knot gusts and watch the spray mount at the edges of the bay. Pelicans gather in the lee behind the boats, floating, and buzzards line the beaches, rising and falling in the thermals, then resting.
The surf has cleared the beaches of stones, sucking them away, so for once the sand is soft enough to walk the strand barefoot. And the bees continue to stream to the boat, but they are dying in increasing numbers, drowning themselves in coffee, yoghurt, sink drains, buckets. I pluck them out by the dozens.
Bees swarming the paintboxes on
the beach today,
bees drowning in yellow ochre
ultra marine
viridian
burnt sienna.
I am dreaming in colour and it is a solace, as if I am visited by Linus's soul.
Images
Watercolour sketches of Linus (2009) and three views of mountains and sea from Ballandra Cove (16 March 2010).
Notes
Quotations from Toni Morrison, Sula. New York: Plume/New American Library, 1973, are from pp. 171 and 174.
I've also quoted from Rainer Maria Rilke's Eighth Duino Elegy. Ed and Trans Stephen Mitchell, in the bilingual edition, The Selected Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke. New York: Vintage Books, 1982, pp. 195, 197.
To be fair, I am characterizing re-readings of Levinas on animals, in particular his 1975 discussion of "Bobby," a dog that for a time visited the philosopher and his fellow Jewish prisoners of war company in the camp near Hannover, Germany where Levinas was kept from 1940 until the end of the war:
"And then, about half way through our long captivity, for a few short
weeks, before the sentinels chased him away, a wandering dog entered
our lives. One day he came to meet this rabble as we returned under
guard from work. He survived in some wild patch in the region of the
camp. But we called him Bobby, an exotic name, as one does with a
cherished dog. He would appear at morning assembly and was waiting
for us as we returned, jumping up and down and barking in delight.
For him, there was no doubt that we were men." 153) Levinas, Emmanuel. "The Name of a Dog, or Natural Rights." Difficult Freedom: Essays on Judaism. Trans. Sean Hand. London: Athlone, 1990. 151-53.See also John Llewelyn, "Am I Obsessed by Bobby? (Humanism of the Other Animal)," in Re-Reading Levinas. Ed. Robert Bernasconi and Simon Crichtly. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1991,
Cary Wolfe, "In the Shadow of Wittgenstein's Lion: Language, Ethics, and the Question of the Animal." In Animal Rites: American Culture, the Discourse of Species, and Posthumanist Theory. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003, pp. 54-62 and
Further significant reflections on these points--and engagement with these texts is to come, here and elsewhere.
Labels:
"Bobby",
animals,
bees,
cats,
colour,
consciousness in animals,
death,
discourses on animals,
Eighth Duino Elegy,
grace,
grief,
Levinas,
Linus,
Mexico,
Nova Scotia,
Rilke,
Sula,
terror,
Toni Morrison
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Vigilance
who can see how eye can know
I awaken. Two large cat eyes, inches from my own, watch me, unblinking.
I think about some lines from a poem by John L'Heureux, "The Thing About Cats:"
A cat is not a conscience; I'm not
saying that.
What I'm saying is
why are they looking?
The cat looks at me this way for as long as I drift in and out of sleep. As soon as I've wakened and am truly conscious, she closes her eyes and relaxes, presses purring into my arms, catnaps. I watch her for several minutes, taking undue pleasure in the dark stain on her nose, in each vari-coloured hair, in the black spots on the soles of her feet. This much is clear: one of us must be on watch.
There is much to watch for. The world is thick with demons, not all of them dangers. Nor is everything that may be seen visible.
...who can see how eye can know?
Notes
"who can see how eye can know" is the tail section of John Hollander's picture poem, "Kitty and Bug." It is printed many places, but I first saw it in Vicki Hearne's Adam's Task: Calling Animals By Name (1987), 244.
The full text of John L'Heureux's "The Thing About Cats" may be found here (and many other places): http://www.freewebs.com/hlgstrider/quotablenoteables.htm
The picture, of course, is of our cat, Dante, who knows most things important to know, even with her eyes shut.
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Early Morning Insomnia
I awaken before sunrise.
The loon calls.
Light streaks the clouds.
A young sparrow lands on the porch and hops about, curious, nervy, but not really afraid.
Juncos have eaten all of the ants that were infesting the porch beams.
Gulls cry out; the young whine.
Last night as the moon was rising, coyote pups began yipping and yowling; it sounded as if they were racing through the woods at the back of the pond. Bathsheba was jumpy; they'd been pursuing something. Dante, the cat, was still out, hiding out, but at around midnight she let me pluck her from her usual perch near the mailbox. I kissed her and kissed her and kissed her and she slept at my side all night.
Here comes the sun, casting orange light into the shallows.
I wonder now if I can go back to sleep.
Grey water, pinkish light.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)





