A Horse Named Cadillac
By Alchemist
The seasons change as do trees of many names
Their
colors, their fruits, their seeds, their loss and their gain
Nature is many things beauty and pain
The worker becomes
wise and the wise become the workers
Perhaps never the
same
Kingdoms of anarchy in an orderly game
As we as man
pray for the predator and the lame
And we construct symbols
of the gods that came
Before us and in the future never
the beast to be tame
So the animals must navigate the narrator
of the wilds’ claim
To wings in the gossiping winds
and galloping hooves on the sun soaked plains
There
once was a wise owl and a work horse
They were best friends
although that was very strange
For a horse and a bird
to know each other half their lives
And gave each other
names even though they didn’t quite understand titles
The
farm horse being wise himself named the owl “Falcon”
Because of his relationships with man he understood titles better
than the owl
So the owl’s name came from his hunting
prowess and keen eyes
The wise owl very limited in his
knowledge of human symbols
Had heard the word Cadillac praised
for its’ strength and performance
And with little wealth
of man’s speech named the horse “Cadillac”
Both names
fitting and at the same time ironic
Every
morning “Falcon” would perch on a post before he went off
to bed
And have a talk with his dear friend that always
ended with this question
Every day it was the same trying
to persuade “Cadillac” to leave the farm
And travel
with him and live free in the woods
But “Cadillac” would
always respond the same
That he respected the farmer and
enjoyed plowing the land
“Falcon” would say but the
farmer only sees you as a tool
Not even worthy of a pet,
yes he feeds you and gives you shelter
But a home is not merely
a place with walls and a roof
It is where you build a life
with creatures you love
And I am your only friend but
in the forest you would be able to meet other companions
Please, come live wild with me and I will spot open fields to
graze
You can eat the grass and that will help me spot my
rats
And when there is no more rats or grass we will explore
the world some more
But just as so many sun rises before
“Cadillac” would say
My friend don’t feel sorry
for me, I am a work horse and I am happy this way
I am not
a slave as you may think we are all put here for a purpose
And
for me it is my love of working the farm
But I hope you return
tomorrow so we can have our thoughtful chats
And I wish
you safe travels and good luck on your adventures tonight
So
“Falcon” was off to sleep and rest, soar and hunt
Still
“Falcon” would come back every day to have conversations
with his friend
One evening after an early
dinner “Falcon” felt like he needed to talk to his friend
He wanted to joke about how easy a prey this snake was and
see about “Cadillac’s” day
But “Cadillac” was
dealing with his own snake in a way but it was no jest
“Cadillac”
at middle age had hurt his leg and was resting in his barn
“Falcon” fashioned a bandage the way he would a nest
Then “Falcon” asked can you walk, yes said “Cadillac”
but I can’t pull my plow
“Falcon” said we must go my
friend, I don’t know as much as you about man
But I do know
when a tool is broken you get a new one and get rid of the
old one
And then in the distance the owl’s night vision
saw the farmer holding his gun
He tried to reason with the
horse with these wise words
Saying man can be very loving
but he doesn’t understand he has enslaved the animals
They
have a great imagination but they don’t live in the moment
as we do in the wild
Man is a true thinker so he lives
more in memories of the past and thoughts of the future
We
are best friends so I would never put you down just because you
became a burden
In man’s eyes birds are pets and horses
are workers and our exotic kin are in zoos
We all know
of man’s great strength and beauty of art and words
Even
the song birds tweet “I know why the caged bird sings”
It’s kind of an ode to our relationship with man
Our
need to be free, write songs and build homes
They admire
our flight and we are in awe of their poets
So I plead
with you “Cadillac” let this be the last time I ask
Come with me my friend before you don’t have another chance
As the man approached the horse struggled to stand
And
then the farmer pointed the shotgun at “Cadillac’s” chest
“Falcon” flew up and swooped down with talons fully out
And clawed at the man’s face almost ripping out an eye and
off his lip
The man cussing and riving in pain drops his
gun
“BOOM”
From the ground it blasted “Falcon’s”
wing and feathers flew
Though not a critical wound he couldn’t
fly
So “Cadillac” picked his friend up and tossed him
on his side
And the two had just enough time
To escape
to the wild woods, now running but soon the freedom to fly
To live as friends, not “Cadillac” and “Falcon”
But
simply as the horse and the owl
Awards
Comments on "A Horse Named Cadillac"
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On Monday, November 13, 2017, Cassette
(1087) wrote:
Almost reminds me of a Native American fable... lovely write.
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On Tuesday, November 13, 2012, Nehema
(958) wrote:
I love the reference to Maya Angelou's 'I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings', was very fitting. I love reading your short stories, you always add so much meaning without being overly dramatic. Subtlety is much more entertaining for people like me - XXOO
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On Tuesday, November 13, 2012, Dei
(663) wrote:
i can see myself reading this as a children's book. beautiful illustrations and glossy pages. i'm fav-ing this darling.