4.04.2023

the live spirit that plays into dead seriousness and will not be punished into goodness

When Milo was a kitten 
and spent the night 
with us in the big bed, 
curled like a brown sock 
at our feet, he would 
wake before daybreak, 
squeak plaintively 
in his best Burmese, 
cat-castrato soprano, 
and make bread on our stomachs 
until if one of us did not rise, 
sleep-walk to the kitchen 
and open his can of food, 
he would steal under the covers, 
crouch, run hard at us, 
jam his head 
in our armpits, 
and burrow fiercely. 
 
Probably he meant nothing by that. 
Or he meant it in cat-contrary, 
just as he did not intend 
drawing blood the day 
he bolted out the door 
and was wild again 
for nearly three hours. 
I could not catch him 
until I knelt, wormed 
into the crawl-space 
under a neighbor house 
and lured him home 
with bits of dried fish. 
 
Or he meant exactly what he smelled, 
and smelled the future 
as it transmogrified out of the past, 
for he is, if not an olfactory 
clairvoyant, 
a highly nuanced cat— 
an undoer of complicated knots, 
who tricks cabinets, 
who lives to upend tall 
glasses of Merlot. 
With his whole body, 
he has censored the finest passages of Moby-Dick. 
He has silenced Beethoven with one paw. 
He has leapt three and a half feet 
from the table by the wall 
    and pulled down 
    your favorite print by Miró. 
    He does not know the word no. 
 
When you asked the vet what 
kind of cat it was, she went 
into the next room 
came back and said, 
“Havana Brown.” 
 
The yellow eyes, the voice, 
the live spirit that plays into dead seriousness 
and will not be punished into goodness, 
but no— 
 
an ancient, nameless breed— 
 
mink he says and I answer in cat. 
Even if I was not 
born in a dumpster 
between a moldy cabbage 
and an expired loaf of bread, 
I too was rescued by an extravagant woman. 
 
[Rodney Jones {1950- } 'For Katy', from Poem-A-Day]

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