White Dog Poem by Carl Phillips

White Dog



First snow-I release her into it-
I know, released, she won't come back.
This is different from letting what,

already, we count as lost go. It is nothing
like that. Also, it is not like wanting to learn what
losing a thing we love feels like. Oh yes:

I love her.
Released, she seems for a moment as if
some part of me that, almost,

I wouldn't mind
understanding better, is that
not love? She seems a part of me,

and then she seems entirely like what she is:
a white dog,
less white suddenly, against the snow,

who won't come back. I know that; and, knowing it,
I release her. It's as if I release her
because I know.

Tuesday, January 6, 2015
Topic(s) of this poem: dog
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Bernie Lock 29 July 2017

Where, into what snow, where does the narrator release the dog? Not in an urban setting, it would seem. The dog catchers will get her. Or she might be hit by a car. Into a wooded area? Maybe, but that would seem to bring its own risks, unless this dog is wilder than the usual pet. In that case, the narrator's action would seem appropriate, even welcome.

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