William Wordsworth

Tribute to the Memory of the Same Dog

Tribute to the Memory of the Same Dog - fact Summary

About Wordsworth's Elderly Dog

This brief elegy commemorates Wordsworth's aged dog, buried without a stone yet marked by an oak. The poem recounts the animal's slow decline and the household's mixed relief and grief at a merciful end. It emphasizes the dog's exceptional capacity for love—toward humans and other animals—arguing that such devotion warrants public honor. Tears are framed as both emotional and rational responses, validating the dog's remembered worth.

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LIE here, without a record of thy worth, Beneath a covering of the common earth! It is not from unwillingness to praise, Or want of love, that here no Stone we raise; More thou deserv'st; but 'this' man gives to man, Brother to brother, 'this' is all we can. Yet they to whom thy virtues made thee dear Shall find thee through all changes of the year: This Oak points out thy grave; the silent tree Will gladly stand a monument of thee. We grieved for thee, and wished thy end were past; And willingly have laid thee here at last: For thou hadst lived till everything that cheers In thee had yielded to the weight of years; Extreme old age had wasted thee away, And left thee but a glimmering of the day; Thy ears were deaf, and feeble were thy knees,-- I saw thee stagger in the summer breeze, Too weak to stand against its sportive breath, And ready for the gentlest stroke of death. It came, and we were glad; yet tears were shed; Both man and woman wept when thou wert dead; Not only for a thousand thoughts that were, Old household thoughts, in which thou hadst thy share; But for some precious boons vouchsafed to thee, Found scarcely anywhere in like degree! For love, that comes wherever life and sense Are given by God, in thee was most intense; A chain of heart, a feeling of the mind, A tender sympathy, which did thee bind Not only to us Men, but to thy Kind: Yea, for thy fellow-brutes in thee we saw A soul of love, love's intellectual law:-- Hence, if we wept, it was not done in shame; Our tears from passion and from reason came, And, therefore, shalt thou be an honoured name!

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