SPARKMAN
Sparkman was a big, black, burly mutt
born and bred in Montague whose days
were spent on a fishing boat rounding
up flapping squid, escorting lobsters
to their bin.
The vet called him a 57 variety Heinz.
I preferred to think of him as a mix
of Wolfhound and Labrador.
A melancholy soul who may have been
a bit bipolar, he couldn’t get enough
of being petted, nudging you with a head butt
reminder to pet some more.
His big brown eyes looked forlorn, stuck to me
like crazy glue, chasing my bike for miles
ignoring commands to “go home!”
He tried to speak in a lamentable whine
like old Preston’s utterances who lived
down the lane, born with a spastic brain.
When the wind of the sea got into his bones,
excited by a flock of screeching gulls
he’d take off in a manic sprint racing down
the beach from Sturgeon Bay to Gaspereaux.
A gentleman who never lunged for food
on the table, but would chase a squirrel
breaking its neck with a crunching bite.
He lived with me for eighteen years,
never complained until he couldn’t stand up.
When pain made it time to put him down,
salt tears ran own both our noses.
I tried in vain to explain, shaking his paw,
squeezing it tight; his palpable tremor of fright
pierced my heart.
I’ll never forget his imploring look as I carried
him to the shelter to enter his dark night.
He seemed to ask:
“Are you sure we have to do this now?