Sunday, June 26, 2011

`Her Way Is Mine'

I like other people’s dogs, as I like most animals except deer ticks and Chihuahuas. I had a dog when I was kid, though it felt like part of my self-conscious striving to be an All-American Boy. Cats are my pet of choice, so babysitting my brother-in-law’s yellow Lab is an exercise in charity and patience. As I write, the dog lies on my feet under the desk, farting and snuffling, and the cat sleeps on the leather chair behind me, silent and self-contained – a ready-made illustration of my preference. I admire diffidence and dignity. Dogs are needy, cats don’t care. David Slavitt seems to agree in “Walking the Dog” (Rounding the Horn, 1978; collected in Change of Address: Poems New and Selected, 2005):

“A dog will sniff at bushes, newel posts,
a familiar ivy bed, track his own scent,
and lift his leg wherever it seems right
to sign his claim. In pride of place he boasts,
`My territory!’ And we pay our rent
and use the pot (until then, it’s not quite
home). I walk the dog at night and think
of spots he’s liked, his map of the good places.
He minds his cues and pees. `Good dog!’ I praise,
Uncomfortable. For us, smell turns to stink;
we are unhappy with our bodies’ traces.
He does his business. I avert my gaze,
who can’t return to my good places, shun
reminders that indict me, cannot say—
as I take him to be saying--`Life is fine!
I like it here.’ A cat, when she is done,
will cover it over and then go on her way,
fastidious, ashamed. Her way is mine.”

Mine, too. It’s the fawning of dogs I can’t take, the abject eagerness to please. It’s the same with people. “Don’t perform,” I want to say. “Forget about me. Be yourself.” It’s especially true of writers. When they work hard to ingratiate themselves, they become as repellent as those who work hard to offend. Both are dogs. Cats don’t care.

2 comments:

  1. Yeah, but dogs aren't scared of the vacuum cleaner.

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  2. You bring up an interesting point about dog writers and cat writers. A by-no-means exhaustive list of writers who have sung the praises of one animal over the other (and I don't include here bi-pet-ual authors like Mark Twain, Alexandre Dumas and P.G. Wodehouse) does seem to suggest that dog writers are more of an upbeat, social and pleasing bent, while the cat writers pursue a more private muse.

    Notable dog writers include:
    Alexander Pope
    Robert Burns
    Samuel Butler
    William Cowper
    John Muir
    Elizabeth Barrett Browning
    Emily Dickinson
    Emily Bronte
    Leo Tolstoy
    Friedrich Nietzsche
    Robert Louis Stevenson
    Rudyard Kipling
    Jack London
    G.K. Chesterton
    Rainer Maria Rilke
    Gertrude Stein
    Sigmund Freud
    Thomas Mann
    Franz Kafka
    Virginia Woolf
    James Thurber
    William Faulkner
    John Steinbeck
    Doris Lessing
    Milan Kundera
    Tom McGuane
    Raymond Carver
    Willie Morris
    Dean Koontz

    Notable cat writers include:
    Petrarch
    Mohammed
    Dr. Johnson
    Montaine
    Victor Hugo
    William Wordsworth
    Lord Byron
    Charles Dickens
    EA Poe
    Charles Baudelaire
    Charlotte Bronte
    Thomas Hardy
    Robert Graves
    WB Yeats
    Henry James
    TS Eliot
    Raymond Chandler
    Ernest Hemingway (30 cats!)
    Albert Camus
    William S. Burroughs
    Charles Bukowski
    Jack Kerouac
    Sylvia Plath
    Hunter Thompson
    Julio Cortazar
    Joyce Carol Oates
    Ruth Rendell
    Margaret Atwood
    Stephen King

    It’s hard to not conclude from such a list that cat writers possess a more iconoclastic, subtle and even snobby bent while dog writers are dominated by those forever making arguments, alternatively idealistic and pragmatic, manly and child-like, more aware of the potential treat awaiting a word well played.

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