I was doing a Google search for an old poem I liked and I came across these. I found them very moving, and the Author seems to have captured the essence of the different species.
PRAYER OF THE ROOSTER:
Do not forget, Lord, it is I who make the sun rise. I am Your servant but, with the dignity of my calling, I need some glitter and ostentation. Noblesse oblige... All the same, I am Your servant, only...do not forget, Lord, I make the sun rise. Amen.
PRAYER OF THE CAT:
Lord, I am the cat. It is not, exactly, that I have something to ask of You! No -- I ask nothing of anyone -- but, if You have by some chance, in some celestial barn, a little white mouse, or a saucer of milk, I know someone who would relish them. Wouldn't You like someday to put a curse on the whole race of dogs? If so I should say Amen.
THE PRAYER OF THE MOUSE:
I am so little and grey, dear God, how can You keep me in mind? Always spied upon, always chased. Nobody ever gives me anything, and I nibble meagrely at life. Why do they reproach me with being a mouse? Who made me but You? I only ask to stay hidden. Give me my hunger's pittance safe from the claws of that devil with green eyes. Amen
THE PRAYER OF THE OLD HORSE:
See, Lord, My coat hangs in tatters, like homespun, old, threadbare. All that I had of zest, all my strength, I have given in hard work and kept nothing back for myself. Now my poor head swings to offer up all the loneliness of my heart. Dear God, stiff on my thickened legs I stand here before You: Your unprofitable servant. Oh! of Your goodness, give me a gentle death. Amen.
By Bernos de Gasztold, who lives in a French Abbey
Translated by Rumer Godden
Thursday, February 08, 2007
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