Friday, February 15, 2008

Pooch

There's a really beautiful short piece today in the University City Review about a dying dog:
...I'd seen death in pictures, on the side of the road, but never so immediately or violently. It wasn't pain by degrees, the bumps and scrapes we accrue every day, lessened by love and whatever gives us comfort. It was final, irrevocable. I stood there for ten minutes,unable to look at anything but this nameless dying dog.
I really suggest you read the whole thing - it's not long. You'll find: the empathy of a nameless narrator. The indifference of passerby. The character of our community. The almost-humanity of a dog. The finality of death.

I'm a big fan of any newspaper that puts this kind of thing on its front page.

I say the almost-humanity of a dog. It's interesting to me - if dogs possessed nothing like humanity, the article wouldn't be evocative at all. If dogs possessed complete humanity, it would be too horrifying to view in a detached manner.

Something about other mammals is just right - they're like us enough to be loved, but unlike us enough that their loss isn't crippling to us. And their experiences are a great proxy for understanding our own.

Is that why they sent chimps into space first?

2 comments:

Unknown said...

I was thinking about this recently - the whole "some dogs I know are better than most people" thing. And I think it's interesting that we think animals are possessed of some innate virtue when it's not actually the case.
Wolves are savage creatures, it's domesticated dogs that we see lovable traits in because they learned them from us.

Nicholas said...

Animals don't sin though. They just be what they are. I think that's what we wish to emulate in them.