Tuesday, 19 February 2008

2005_06_01_archive



poem The Adapted Cat

THE ADAPTED CAT

Sat all Saturday

bored and basically

hating the day and

waiting for something.

Sally my sister

and I were dying

inside and trying

not to go crazy.

A crack and a boom

came thundering in

and spilled the rain all

over Mom's carpet.

A pounce and a whush

delivered a cat

who bolt upright and

read this announcement:

"A trick on a dark

day helps the draggy

time pass, and chases

the grays out your door.

If you wish, you can

watch the dribbing and

drabs, or with tricks, take

a stab in the blue.

With your fish, you can

sit, and scout for your

Mom, so then when she's

nigh, upon your cry,

you, I, and the fry

can finish our fun,

hose down the house, and

only then, when the

storm has passed and

our time is done, will

we swiftly kick these

unpleasantries out."

Just then, with a dart,

from the red-and-white

stack of his stovepipe

hat, a teensy hand

snatched, from the reading

cat's clutches, the note

from which he had been

piecing his speech and,

sin mucho ado,

the hand withdrew and

cat, moving too, slunk

straight and away through.

"Just what I feared," sneered

our bowl-bound fish, "this

brash interloper

acts like he knows her,

puts on a show, but

no one does nothing,

or so much as yawns,

without absolute,

incontestable,

indigestible

proof their intentions

are pure and a sworn

affidavit that

shows they've consulted

and have thoroughly

secured the total,

written, explicit

permission of Mom."

Then up his upright

umbrella pole the

cat perched the fish in

his wobbledy bowl

and pirouetted

his own tippety

toe on a ball that

slopped slippety-so

down a freshly waxed

hall, with pitching and

woe, caterwauling

and yaw, like a lone

logroller clambers

over the lumber,

limberly scrambling

out from under and

gingerly hoping

to regain control.

Not heeding, it seems,

the fish's wee shrieks,

or his little orb's

diminishing wet,

the cat on the ball

started to bounce, and

struggle to juggle

the peeved little pet,

plus dead overhead

any movable junk,

or half-forgotten

snack, from any old

accessible crack,

or measly mouse that

popped into his path

whilst pogoing round

our deep-brown, detached,

family-friendly,

and apparently

unparented house.

He tricked dick-and-jane

from their dustbunny

lair, and for pleasure

a Dickens he found

languishing there, then

bowled them and the fish

through the juggular

air, while researching

for additional

distractions, like a

leftover dish of

left-out cream, Dad's old

rake still dripping of

soylent green, and a

marbular carton

of spaghetti ice

cream that Sally once

loved and now resides

calcified deep in

our freezer downstairs.

"Put me down," screamed the

downright adamant

fish, but the mad cat

oblivious could

scarcely see, through his

gyrations and glee,

and the field of fast

invisible hands,

that he was deep in

danger of flinging

it all, the proud and

perfect result of

his haul, the fat and

happy assorted

detritus, the massed

and sordid horde he'd

acquired, including

a log still flapping

its fire, in a vast

and fulsome, frightsome

and wholesome, bouncing

big baby shebang.

Through all the buzz, fate

belled the cat, as the

inevitable

inevitably

does, and his face and

hat lay splat in the

dust, while all through the

house, projectiles took

flight, the heavier and

messier went right

to their appointed

plots, and fish to a

pot, suspended and

hot, in the kitchen.

The cat raised his head

in some painless pain,

like an ump calling

a day due to rain,

a sheep just sheared and

his ribs shown plain, like

passing a ten-ton

sorcerer's stone, a

magician's shame at

a trick well-blown, or

a monster's fury

for sins unatoned.

Then we could see, neath

his strip�d stack, a

face more monkey or

man than cat, with his

front-facing eyes and

foot of five digits,

his prehensile tail

and backbone rigid,

and the way he grasped

Sally's szechuan fan.

We could see it all,

through his twidgets and

tricks, that no matter

whence his forebears had

come, dashing cross the

savanna, with or

without gun, that he

was happily and

fully adapted

to fun, sorry for

storming and wrecking

our calm, and vowing

to set the rainy

day right, wipe away

any suggestion

of blight, swiftly fix

and polish it bright,

and then split, ere Mom.

But his hat seemed to

have a soul of its

own, in the space of

an instant it had

gracefully grown full

ninety-nine sizes

too large for his head,

then sprung some new life

form, which quickly spread,

and occupied each

niche in our indoor

ecology, new

things were evolving,

sans apology,

and making the house

their very own shambling,

shivering, rambling,

quivering river

of overgrown goo

and personal swamp.

The things flew kites in

the interior

breezes, then their lines

intersectual

lashed us all at the

knees, and our pleas

ineffectual

couldn't sway, nor cries

for mercy delay,

things having their way.

But the cat had one

trick in the sack that

he kept sequestered

round the rim of his

hat, and with his tail

unfurling, in a

flanking maneuver,

he extracted a

vacuum from the

red-and-white stack, then

smoothly hoovered the

things and their goo from

the throwaway rug

and our ceiling too

then sucked up our house

and all of the yard,

all the crumbular

remains and the shards

of the shattered day

and the scattered clouds.

When next we turned to

look, we were again

alone, with our Mom

approaching, though it

appeared our home was

none the worse for the

wear that the cat, or

whatever he and

things actually were,

exacted and weren't

missing any of

the things extracted

when she wasn't there.

The fish still burbling

and rain now sleeting.

What remained was a


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