Do they know, as we do, that their time must come?
Yes, they know, at rare moments.
No other way can I interpret those pauses of his
latter life, when, propped on his forefeet, he would sit for long minutes quite
motionless-his head drooped, utterly withdrawn; then turn those eyes of his and
look at me.
That look said more plainly than all words could:
"Yes, I know that I must go."
If we have spirits that persist-they have.
No one, I think, who really longs for truth, can ever
glibly say which it will be for dog and man-persistence or extinction of our consciousness.
There is but one thing certain-the childishness of
fretting over that eternal question.
Whichever it be, it must be right, the only possible
thing.
He felt that too, I know; but then, like his master,
he was what is called a pessimist.
My companion tells me that, since he left us, he has
once come back.
It was Old Year's Night, and she was sad, when he came
to her in visible shape of his black body, passing round the dining table from
the window end, to his proper place beneath the table, at her feet.
She saw him quite clearly; she heard the padding
tap-tap of his paws and very toe-nails; she felt his warmth brushing hard against
the front of her skirt.
She thought
then that he would settle down upon her feet, but something disturbed him, and he
stood pausing, pressed against her, then moved out toward where I generally
sit, but was not sitting that night.
She saw him stand there, as if considering; then at
some sound or laugh, she became self-conscious, and slowly, very slowly, he was
no longer there.
Had he some message, some counsel to give, something
he would say, that last night of the last year of all those he had watched over
us?
Will he come back again?
No stone stands over where he lies. It is on our hearts
that his life is engraved.
(John Galsworthy (1867-1933))
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