Dog Years

Home > Other > Dog Years > Page 1
Dog Years Page 1

by Mark Doty




  Dog Years

  a memoir

  Mark Doty

  …How could God have created the world if He were already everywhere? One cabbalistic response is to assume that He did so by abandoning a region of Himself.

  —DARIAN LEADER,

  Stealing the Mona Lisa

  If your Nerve, deny you—

  Go above your Nerve—

  —EMILY DICKINSON

  I am not lonely. I am not afraid. I am still yours.

  —ROBINSON JEFFERS,

  “THE HOUSEDOG’S GRAVE”

  Contents

  Epigraph

  Chapter one

  Entr’acte: On Sentimentality

  Chapter Two

  Entr’acte: On Being a Fool

  Chapter Three

  Entr’acte: The Photographed Dog

  Chapter Four

  Entr’acte: Smell of Rain in the Field

  Chapter Five

  Entr’acte: Dogs and Their Names

  Chapter Six

  Entr’acte: Graveside

  Chapter Seven

  Entr’acte: Ethical Fable

  Chapter Eight

  Entr’acte: Ordinary Happiness

  Chapter Nine

  Entr’acte: Old Photo

  Chapter Ten

  Entr’acte: Zero Point

  Chapter Eleven

  Entr’acte: Questions About Time

  Chapter Twelve

  Entr’acte: Serotonin

  Chapter Thirteen

  Entr’acte: A Show

  Chapter Fourteen

  Entr’acte: Drugs for Arden

  Chapter Fifteen

  Entr’acte: Second Wind

  Chapter Sixteen

  Entr’acte: Toy Wolf

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Other Books by Mark Doty

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Chapter One

  No dog has ever said a word, but that doesn’t mean they live outside the world of speech. They listen acutely. They wait to hear a term—biscuit, walk—and an inflection they know. What a stream of incomprehensible signs passes over them as they wait, patiently, for one of a few familiar words! Because they do not speak, except in the most limited fashion, we are always trying to figure them out. The expression is telling: to “figure out” is to make figures of speech, to invent metaphors to help us understand the world. To choose to live with a dog is to agree to participate in a long process of interpretation—a mutual agreement, though the human being holds most of the cards.

  What the interpreter must do is tell stories—sometimes to the dog in question. Who hasn’t heard a dog walker chattering away to her pet, as if she were serving as a kind of linguistic mirror: “You are scared of that police horse,” “Lola loves that ball!” Some people speak for their dogs in the first person, as though the dog were ventriloquizing his owner. There’s inevitably something embarrassing about this; a kind of silly intimacy that might seem sweet at home becomes a source of eye-rolling discomfort to strangers.

  But most stories about dogs are narrated to other people, as we go on articulating the tales of our animals’ lives, in order to bring their otherwise incomprehensible experience into the more orderly world of speech. Taking pictures of your pet serves much the same function; it isn’t just about memory and the desire to record, but a way to bring something of the inchoate into the world of the represented. This is a part of the pet owner’s work. In order to live within the domestic world, the dog must be named, read, and in some way understood.

  Of course, listening to stories about other people’s pets is perilous, like listening to the recitation of dreams. Such reports may be full of charm for the dreamer, but for the poor listener they’re usually fatally dull. The dreamer has no distance from the spell of the dream, and cannot say just how it mattered so, and language mostly fails to capture the deeply interior character of dreams anyway. We listen with an appreciation for the speaker’s intent, but without much interest in the actual story.

  Love itself is a bit like that: you can describe your beloved until the tongue tires and still, in truth, fail to get at the particular quality that has captured you. We give up, finally, and distill such feelings into single images: the bronzy warmth of one of his glances, or that way of turning the head she has when she’s thinking and momentarily stops being aware of other people. That, we tell ourselves, stands for what we love. But it’s perfectly clear that such images explain nothing. They serve as signposts for some incommunicable thing. Being in love is our most common version of the unsayable; everyone seems to recognize that you can’t experience it from the outside, not quite—you have to feel it from the inside in order to know what it is.

  Maybe the experience of loving an animal is actually more resistant to language, since animals cannot speak back to us, cannot characterize themselves or correct our assumptions about them. They look at us across a void made of the distance between their lives and our immersion in language. “Not a single one of his myriad sensations,” wrote Virginia Woolf of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s cocker spaniel, Flush, “ever submitted itself to the deformity of words.”

  Maybe they remind us, in this way, of our own origins, when our bodies were not yet assumed into the world of speech. Then we could experience wordlessly, which must at once be a painful thing and a strange joy, a pure kind of engagement that adults never know again. Can it even be called “painful” or a “joy,” if the infant who is feeling those things has no terms for them, only the uninterpreted life of emotion and sensation? We suffer a loss, leaving the physical world for the world of words—even though we gain our personhood in the process.

  Love for a wordless creature, once it takes hold, is an enchantment, and the enchanted speak, famously, in private mutterings, cryptic riddles, or gibberish. This is why I shouldn’t be writing anything to do with the two dogs who have been such presences for sixteen years of my life. How on earth could I stand at the requisite distance to say anything that might matter?

  Last month five thousand people died here in New York; the ruins of the towers in which—with which—they fell smolder still. [I wrote these words in October of 2001; the dead had not yet been properly counted; it was impossible to find the bodies, and the lists of the missing were unclear.] When the wind is right, Chelsea fills with the smell of burning plastic, as if somewhere down in the rubble thousands and thousands of computers were slowly, poisonously burning, along with fluorescent tubes and industrial carpeting and the atomized pieces of corporate art that lined the reception room walls. My friends in other cities speak about the new war, the roots of this atrocity and its relationship to other atrocities around the globe; they worry over the notion of “evil,” whether it’s a reality or a concept with no use in the public sphere. I understand that such things matter, but for me they’re nothing but air.

  I can’t stop seeing the whitened boots of the rescue workers trudging back uptown, or sitting beside me on the subway benches. Their battered leather and shoelaces, cuffs and ankles are covered with a thick powder composed of atomized concrete: the pulverized stuff of two hundred floors of offices—desk chairs, files, coffee cups—commingled with the stuff of human bodies reduced to creamy ash. The rubble trucks rumble up Eighth Avenue, uncovered. The white grit blows out in troubled eddies, and snow gusts and coats our faces and hair. Somewhere in that dust are the atoms of Graham, a man I knew a little, and saw last at the end of summer, when he was laughing on the street, his tattooed arms flashing in the sun.

  With the world in such a state, isn’t it arrogance or blind self-absorption to write about your dogs?

  Yes and no. Just as my friends’ generalizations about the political situation mean
little to me now, because they are abstract, so it is hard to apprehend five thousand deaths; the sheer multiplicity of human lives lost makes the fact of those losses ungraspable. The collective may be almost impossible to apprehend, but the individual loss is vital, irreducible; it has the factual character of a single body, and that body’s absence. That is why New York is full of posters, images of the dead, left up, even pasted onto more subway walls and lampposts and mailboxes than before, long after it’s possible that anyone living will be found in the rubble. We need to see the faces, look at them one at a time, and absorb whatever bit of detail we’re offered, the characterizing information that begins to form a picture of a life: a scar, a titanium plate mending a broken bone, a birthmark starring a hip. What was hidden, a month ago, is now the displayed marker of individuality. We need them to look at us and make themselves real.

  And every death is like that, isn’t it? We use the singular to approach the numberless. The local provides a means to imagine the whole. A student of mine lost his brother a year ago to a drunk driver. After the towers fell, he found himself almost obsessively imagining how it must have been for individuals there: did this one’s consciousness end in a shower of rubble, did she remain aware after the fall of a steel beam? When, in the downward flight from the hot windows of the building, did this man cease to feel? This relentless visualizing was a sort of self-torture, but it seemed he couldn’t stop. Then he realized that the work he was doing, really, was the imaginative investigation of his brother’s death. Was there time for pain, for any understanding of what had taken place, or did awareness end with the sudden obliteration of the oncoming car smashing into the driver’s door? It seemed necessary to rehearse these possibilities, to feel one’s way through what it might be like to die, and dreadful as the fiery deaths downtown were in themselves, they were also a vehicle through which Gill would learn to picture the end of his brother’s life.

  I began to do the same thing, imagining Graham’s last hours. He waits in line, at Logan, a little sleepy still, not as eager as he might like to be for the flight to L.A.; he’s thinking about Tim in Provincetown, whom he won’t see now for a few days, maybe he’s called and said, Hey, you were still asleep when I left…He’s drinking airport coffee, he’s reading the newspaper in a casual, half-attentive way, and then he’s moving in line to get his boarding pass scanned, he’s on the Jetway, then he’s settling into his seat and listening to the recitation of the flight attendants, which he has, without meaning to, memorized. The question, of course, is when does he know? It’s not till after take-off, but it can’t be long after, if the plane’s going to veer off course south and east to New York. What is the first disruption, when does he understand just how disrupted things really are? When the plane changes pilots, is there a swerve or a dip or nothing at all? And as the speed mounts, as the plane descends, when does he know—does he ever know—where they’re headed?

  And just a few minutes before, I’m walking on West Sixteenth Street toward the F train, on my way to the library, and on the corner, maybe ten people are standing around, facing south, their necks angled up. What are they looking at? From here, the hole in the north tower is a distinctive, unforgettable shape, something like the outline of an unfamiliar continent in a school geography book. A version of Australia. Except there’s nothing inside the territory defined by the border, it’s blank inside, though ringed, visible even all the way from Sixteenth Street, by flames.

  These deaths aren’t commensurate: one twenty-one-year-old man denied the fulfillment and adventure of a life does not equal five thousand selves suddenly snuffed out. My acquaintance—my carpenter’s boyfriend—hurtling to his arbitrary, unpredictable, hapless death, caught in the machinations of global capitalism, the aftermath of colonial empires, the rise of fundamentalism, the battles for the power-money elixir of petroleum—that’s one singular vanishing. No death equals another, really, not when every life is individuated by circumstance and culture, body and desire, the within and without that make us ourselves. I know it might seem absurd, to place the death of my dog on this page with all these people, vanished parents and children and lovers and friends.

  Yet Beau’s body was a fact, too, wasn’t it? The particular pink ruffle of those gums, turning to black at the jowls, and the long curl of the spotted tongue, a wet pink splashed with inkish spots like blotches of berry juice, and the palate with its fine roof of intricate ridges—those were physical, intimate realities that have been swept away. I can no longer take pleasure in seeing and knowing their presence, their actuality. Someone was here, an intelligence and sensibility, a complex of desires and memories, habits and expectations. Someone with a quality of being exactly this: here I am, myself, all tongue and eyes and golden paws reaching forward into what lies ahead. Golden: for me that’s forever his word now, and something about that blond shine is gone from the world forever. And something of it remains absolutely clear to me, the quality of him, the aspect of him most inscribed within me.

  You can only understand the world through what’s at hand.

  Everything else is an idea about reality, a picture or a number, a theory or a description. There’s nowhere to begin but here.

  A while ago, I had a drink with a new acquaintance, who was taking a little time away from his work and had come to the seashore to write a screenplay. Over a beer, in the way that people offer a topic of conversation in order to know one another better, he asked what I’d like to do if my commitments were all waived, if I suddenly had the freedom to choose whatever. I said I’d buy a place with a barn, in the country, and open a shelter for homeless retrievers.

  He looked at me a little incredulously. He seemed to be choosing his words carefully. “I don’t know,” he said, “when people talk about what they want to do for animals, I always wonder why that compassion isn’t offered to other people.”

  My anger flared, a hot, fierce flush. I said, “You asked me what I wanted to do, not what I thought I should do.”

  He nodded. “Fair enough.” But the damage was done, the judgment cast. If I’d been more thoughtful and less offended, I might have said that compassion isn’t a limited quality, something we can only possess so much of and which thus must be carefully conserved. I might have said, if I was truly being honest, that I’ve never known anyone holding this opinion to demonstrate much in the way of empathy with other people anyway; it seems that compassion for animals is an excellent predictor of one’s ability to care for one’s fellow human beings.

  But the plain truth is no one should have to defend what he loves. If I decide to become one of those dotty old people who live alone with six beagles, who on earth is harmed by the extremity of my affections? There is little enough devotion in the world that we should be glad for it in whatever form it appears, and never mock it, or underestimate its depths.

  Love, I think, is a gateway to the world, not an escape from it.

  When my partner Wally died, in 1994, my way of dealing with that unassimilable fact was to write a book about it—books, in truth, since I wrote both a memoir and many poems informed by that reverberant, disordering loss. The response to those books was extraordinary, and heartening, but there are always dissatisfied readers, too, and, of course, it’s the negative voice that lodges in the back of my skull like a bad song on the radio you can’t shake. A particularly sour British critic’s words trot themselves out when the opportunity’s ripe. The reviewer called me a “vampire feasting on his lover’s body.” As if one simply didn’t have the right to talk about such misery; shouldn’t you, after all, buck up, get on with it? We all have our sufferings, dear, now shut up.

  The public revelation of grief is unseemly, an embarrassment of self-involvement. Or at least that’s how it seems on the surface. The truth is probably that we want grief to remain invisible because we can’t do anything about it, and because it invariably reminds us of the losses we’ll all suffer someday, the ineluctable approach of sorrow.

  For someone
grieving for animals, the problem’s compounded.

  You can’t tell most people about the death of your dog, not quite; there is an expectation that you shouldn’t overreact, shouldn’t place too much weight on this loss. In the scheme of things, shouldn’t this be a smaller matter? It’s just a dog; get another one.

  One of the unspoken truths of American life is how deeply people grieve over the animals who live and die with them, how real that emptiness is, how profound the silence is these creatures leave in their wake. Our culture expects us not only to bear these losses alone, but to be ashamed of how deeply we feel them.

  The death of a pet is, after all, the first death that most of us know. Not long ago, I visited an old hotel on Block Island, a big, white Victorian perched on grassy slopes above inlets leading to the sea. Walking down toward the cove, I came upon the grave of a golden retriever, made by the children of the family that owned the place. It was ringed in stones, and planted with flowers, and bore a wooden sign painted with the dog’s name. I recognized it because, back in the house, I’d seen a photograph of his old, white face. In the backyard, there was an Adirondack chair sitting in the grass, and in the seat, a portrait of the missing fellow, a painting of him asleep on a rug, maybe on one of the hotel’s windswept porches. The chair and the painting seemed markers of an absence; the grave was tended, honored; both were markers of memory, gestures intended to resist absence, or rather, more precisely, to conserve it. If Elliot was forgotten, he’d be lost again, wouldn’t he? But if his absence remained, if the space where he stood or lay on the rug were given attention—then that’s a way of keeping something of the dead with us, even if what is kept is an empty outline.

 

‹ Prev