He was friendly, the sort of guy who welcomed strangers of almost any species. Though a little slow, mentally speaking, he usually got our jokes. His instinctive reaction to you was something like: “Hi! Would you like a cup of coffee?” He was trusting and affectionate. We tried to learn something from his temperament.
Luke was roughly fifteen
when he died on Monday. We had him for thirteen years. A friend had rescued him
and already had another dog so she offered him to us. He had already been named "Luke" so I thought of him as Luke the Drifter, one of Hank Williams’ recording
pseudonyms.
“They don’t have sense
enough to see our flaws.
Thank god for that. A big
round of applause
“For what can sniff your
ass and still love you.
Dogs love us
uncomplainingly because
They don’t have sense
enough to see our flaws.”


3 comments:
To Edith Wharton , a wise commentator, cats are “snakes with fur.”
Condolences on your loss. Anyone nutty enough to let an animal roam around in their house will understand. Rae, our cat, is eighteen (at least) and we're aware that one day soon she won't be with us anymore. That will be a genuine diminishment, but that's the contract you sign when you extend your love to anything in this this world.
I am sorry to learn that you have lost one of your long-time companions. Pet deaths can be (or was, for me) so distinctly, piercingly difficult.
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