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I can’t help myself. When I see a dog coming, I have to stop and say hello. Especially when I’m away from my own dog. Then I usually have to stop and pet the dog. Talk to it. Be its new best friend.

I was travelling in Canada last week. Canada LOVES dogs! They were everywhere! In shops. In restaurants. On ferries. In hotels. Water bowls outside store windows. I wish I could travel with mine. But she’s a 95-lb Bernese Mountain dog — and I don’t own a private jet.

I also love pantoums.

I love the echo and repetition. I love the subtlety of the repeated lines, how they gain new meaning from one stanza to the next. They’re not always easy to create. But last October, Irish poet and theologian Padraig ǑTuama offered a pantoum prompt with instructions (see bottom of this post) that –for me – opened the flood gate.

 

 

I wrote this poem last year and returned to it this week, after being on vacation, away from my dog.

 

I love coming home to her—and am ever-grateful for the trusted friends who care for her when I’m gone.

Bonny

 

 

you were bound for Alaskan life, but the sale fell through

safety-space inside your crate, but your home is at my hip 

strangers gasp – your beauty stops them in their tracks

secretly, we each believe we received the greater gift

  

you become my safety-space, your home is at my hip

unselfishly, accept a role –I didn’t know if you could fill

secretly, we each believe we received the greater gift

to the world, a 95-pound reservoir of delight

 

unselfishly, you fill a hole –I didn’t know I had the will

morning forests wait for us, my nightly couch companion

my world, a 95-pound reservoir of delight

promise me…please-don’t-leave-me; will you live to be?

  

morning forests wait for us, my nightly couch companion

strangers gasp – your beauty stops them in their tracks

promise me: live to be the old dog that I need

you were bound for Alaskan life, thank god the sale fell through

 

draft, Patricia J. Franz
photos ©Patricia J. Franz

 

Instructions for creating a pantoum–

The answer to each question below forms one line in your poem.

  1. Where you got the item

 

  1. Where you keep it

 

  1. What others say about it

 

  1. A secret only it knows

 

  1. A description of it

 

  1. How others see it

 

  1. A particular time you reached for it

 

  1. What it means to you

 

Try to make each line of roughly equal length, and certainly each line should be no wider than a page. Then arrange the 8 lines in the following order (each line is repeated, so this will turn into a 16-line poem).

 

1-

2-

3-

4-

 

2-

5-

4-

6-

 

5-

7-

6-

8-

7-

3-

8-

1-

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