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DOG GONE





MOSES faithful companion for almost 14 years, died age 16.....my old dog " a heartbeat at my feet." apologies to Mrs. Wharton, but Moses was- in his prime- 70 pounds, so "little" hardly seems appropriate - I'll make it up to her at a later date-She was a great dog lover too. There will definitely be more dog posts!







MOSES~ Liz Tapp



" you think dogs will not be in heaven? I tell you, they will be there
long before any of us." R. L. Stevenson





Life is about Loss, and
2008 made that all the more a Reality. I lost my heart- named Moses-beloved companion of over almost 14 years. An American Staffordshire Terrier- Moses was a rescue dog with heart worms and one last chance- ME. What a perfect pairing- I was perfect in his dark eyes, and he was mine and mine alone. "I was his and he loved me. That was Manifest,"- as writer Roxanna Robinson said of her own dog. After 18 months of going downhill, No place Moses wanted to go- the last the final blow landed late in the summer- canine cognitive dementia. The promise I made to remember who Moses was and how all dogs should be always- running, rushing, ripping- started plaguing me. I had already moved my- I should say- "our" bedroom downstairs into the dining room over a year ago when the vet said no more flights of stairs for Moses- little did he know he was sending me to the dining room. After discussing this option with my live in- my mother, and lamenting the sadness of Moses slowing, going down- we then lamented losing the dining room for what was hoped- a very long, long time. At times I felt like Mrs Manson Mingott, the matriarch in Edith Wharton's Age of Innocence- accepting visitors downstairs in her main rooms because she could no longer take the stairs.





" what thou lov'st well remains, the rest is dross what thou lov'st well shall not be reft from thee." E. Pound





So without more sad information to the reader- Moses is gone to green Elysian fields and has been joined by our great friend, decorative painter, dog walker of Moses extraordinaire- Sandford Peele. For ten years, Peele had a key to the house and office and would come by every morning for his walk with Moses- though I wasn't always up everyday to greet them on return. When I was, Peele and I would have coffee with a side of the most delightful and fluid conversation- always ending with Moses finishing off the coffee in Peele's cup. I would never have allowed Moses coffee except from his friend- it wasn't discussed-It was just done. Alas- I have no photograph of the three of us or even of SP and Moses- a great shame, don't wait, get the picture you won't have to regret not taking.







"you ask of my companions? The hills sir- and a dog as large as myself that my father bought me. They are better than beings, because they know, but do not tell." Emily Dickinson









"histories are more full of examples of the fidelity of dogs than of friends." Alexander Pope





I have long admired photographer Sally Mann- Her work is hauntingly evocative, somehow familiar and yet, impossibly remote. Sally Mann's work and subsequent book- What Remains is all these things; A study of loss and letting go. Particularly compelling are some of her images of her beloved companion greyhound Eva- She describes her fascination with Eva's body in photographs and the letting go process- photographed with the detachment of an artist and the devotion of a companion left to grieve her way through the process.








Sally Mann and companion- Louie- one of her many greyhounds. photographed by Diana Walker for the book Second Chances More Tales of Found Dogs. Mann describes Louie as "never less than a perfect gentleman."







from WHAT REMAINS Sally Mann~ " shall not be reft from thee."







SHAGGY MUSES
THE DOGS WHO INSPIRED.... is an overwhelmingly delightful resource for dog lovers-



Focusing on many of my favorite writers Virginia Woolf, Emily Dickinson, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Edith Wharton and Emily Bronte- Adams weaves these authors words of praise for their own beloved dogs into a work chronicling the loves and lives with dogs. My favorite fictional novel of a dog has to be FLUSH a biography by Virginia Woolf- a first edition in my library- this book combines all the layers-writer writes about writer's dog- Flush-his kidnapping and subsequent return. True story.











Elizabeth Barrett Browning~ Robert Browning, courting her and recognizing her deep inseparable tie to Flush~ wrote " I shall not attempt speak and prove my feelings- you know what even Flush is to me thro' you." Their courtship and growing intimacy centered around the dog and Flush was the go between-remember Elizabeth was a repressed Victorian. In some of Browning's letters to Elizabeth he imagines himself as Flush- I'll say no more about that- but you get the picture.





a watercolor of Elizabeth and Flush by her brother Alfred Barrett (1843).....and from Flush, " between them lay the widest gulf that can separate one being from another. She spoke. He was dumb. She was woman: He was dog. This closely united, thus immensely divided, they gazed at each other. Then with one bound, Flush sprang onto the sofa, and laid himself where he was to lie for ever after on the rug at Miss Barrett's feet."









Emily Dickinson's said of her Newfoundland-
" I talk of all these things with Carlo. and his eyes grow meaning and his shaggy brown feet keep a slower pace." A favorite poet, I am constantly finding out new things about Emily Dickinson- she still fascinates writers and readers alike- who knew such a recluse could have such a full life- I suspect only Dickinson herself- perhaps this was one reason why she contented herself with her own company much of her life. Like Barrett Browning- Emily wrote often of Carlo and used him as a go between in her correspondences.









Carlo's death brought great bereavement to Emily (- she wrote to a friend, " Carlo died. E Dickinson, would you instruct me now?" and in a poem " Remit as yet on Grace- No furrow on the Glow, yet a Druidic Difference Enhances Nature now."









" I believe that the first to come and greet me when I go to heaven will be this dear, faithful, old friend Carlo." Emily Dickinson











"Remit as yet on Grace- No furrow on the Glow, yet a Druidic Difference Enhances Nature Now." E.D.













"to call him a dog hardly seems to do him justice, though in as much as he has four legs, a tail , and he barked, I admit he was to all outward appearance a dog. But to those of us that knew him well- He was a Perfect Gentleman." Hermione Gingold









Dog's provide a most sacred companionship to humans- asking no questions, making no reproaches. Telling no secrets. Maybe a reason for our great love affair with dogs- or better yet, maybe it is that one and only special dog that finds us.