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Cries are an Awful Din

Seven of eight pups writhe against each other

in a great cardboard box cut to enclose them

with pink blanket and wet towel and maternal warmth,

curled up against one another, noses searching their blind world to nurse.

One is dying.  It is the one my mother holds

against her stomach--the one who suckles her fingertip, which she's dipped in water--

the one who moans again, again, again, more raucous than any of them,

though it can no longer even lift its head.

It is this one whom little Jaedon has been watching

for hours with tears in his eyes, speaking earnestly from

his seven-year-old heart for this thing that has lived not even two weeks,

"I would do anything, anything, anything..."

again, again, again.  In him still is such hope

it may live, but his cries are an awful din to me.

I cannot cry with him.  I cannot even touch

the little animal anymore.

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Written by
karen-elena-parks
American
Published
Apr 22, 2012
Lines·Words
16·156
Notes

© K.E. Parks, 2012

Permission

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