Abraham Lincoln, said my
father, knew of a tonic
That could make you a new
man, with enough left over
To make a little yellow
dog. The first part is only sense;
Who does not make a new
man each time he wakes
Choosing among those
pieces of him that lie to hand?
This memory but not that
one; this vice but
Not – never again! – that
virtue too dearly bought.
From suchlike things I
have conjured myself
At least ten thousand
times, without a tonic.
What concerns me now is
that yellow dog
Making itself impudently of the parts left over
Making itself impudently of the parts left over
Bad enough when he barks
at me when we pass,
I on my way to work and he
off to chase sticks and cats
And other dogs, but worse-
far, far worse! –
Those days he grins at me
or offers a sympathetic paw.
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