ke I was a dog in my former life, a very good dog,... | B Michael Tumblr

  I was a dog in my former life, a very good
  dog, and, thus, I was promoted to a human being.
  I liked being a dog. I worked for a poor farmer
  guarding and herding his sheep. Wolves and coyotes
  tried to get past me almost every night, and not
  once did I lose a sheep. The farmer rewarded me
  with good food, food from his table. He may have
  been poor, but he ate well. And his children
  played with me, when they weren’t in school or
  working in the field. I had all the love any dog
  could hope for. When I got old, they got a new
  dog, and I trained him in the tricks of  trade.
  He quickly learned, and the farmer brought me into
  the house to live with them. I brought the farmer
  his slippers in the morning, as he was getting
  old, too. I was dying slowly, a little bit at a
  time. The farmer knew this and would bring the
  new dog in to visit me from time to time. The
  new dog would entertain me with his flips and
  flops and nuzzles. And then one morning I just
  didn’t get up. They gave me a fine burial down
  by the stream under a shade tree. That was the
  end of my being a dog. Sometimes I miss it so
  I sit by the window and cry. I live in a high-rise
  that looks out at a bunch of other rises.
  At my job I work in a cubicle and barely speak
  to anyone all day. This is my reward for being
  a good dog. The human wolves don’t even see me.
  They fear me not.


—James Tate, “The Promotion”

I was a dog in my former life, a very good
dog, and, thus, I was promoted to a human being.
I liked being a dog. I worked for a poor farmer
guarding and herding his sheep. Wolves and coyotes
tried to get past me almost every night, and not
once did I lose a sheep. The farmer rewarded me
with good food, food from his table. He may have
been poor, but he ate well. And his children
played with me, when they weren’t in school or
working in the field. I had all the love any dog
could hope for. When I got old, they got a new
dog, and I trained him in the tricks of trade.
He quickly learned, and the farmer brought me into
the house to live with them. I brought the farmer
his slippers in the morning, as he was getting
old, too. I was dying slowly, a little bit at a
time. The farmer knew this and would bring the
new dog in to visit me from time to time. The
new dog would entertain me with his flips and
flops and nuzzles. And then one morning I just
didn’t get up. They gave me a fine burial down
by the stream under a shade tree. That was the
end of my being a dog. Sometimes I miss it so
I sit by the window and cry. I live in a high-rise
that looks out at a bunch of other rises.
At my job I work in a cubicle and barely speak
to anyone all day. This is my reward for being
a good dog. The human wolves don’t even see me.
They fear me not.

—James Tate, “The Promotion”

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