Luke goes from dog to cat. |
That old hound dog he didn’t mean to rile me, but he did rile and he cause’n me to sneeze a lot, old Yeller did, make’n me to be allergic and all, and so I had to lose that old hound dog, and so my friend Flint up the road a- ways, he done went and got me this cat-- well sir, I ain’t never done had a cat, being that I done had dogs all my born days, but I was a fur piece in sadness, so I says, “Okay, I reckon a cat is Jim Dandy, yet’n he ain’t nothing so much like a dog ya see, since he sits around like’n he’s owns this here house." And he don’t mind me at all, this’n new black cat, (Oh he be black like the night with’n out the moon, so’n I speck I should call him Midnight) and he’n a mind to be as uppity as cow-pie stinks a-floatin’ on up. Oh, I tryin’ to hold him at first, but he will have none of that, and he went a-boltin’ off my chest like that there lightning zaps his behind, and he goes a-bellerin‘, but it ain’t no bellerin’ I done ever heard before; no sir, it be like that old pump handle on my well out back all freezed up with rust and squealin‘ like’n he be the Devil. (And Midnight would sit on the fence swishing his tail, eyeing Luke as Luke fed the chickens, baled hay, and tended to the herd. Luke was no longer plagued with sneeze. Midnight eyed Luke narrowly with regularity. And Luke became schooled in feline haughtiness, realizing at once that cows are cows, and sheep are sheep, and some are led, but one will never herd cats.) 40 Lines Writer’s Cramp 4-17-16 |