Rod McKuen's

"A Cat Named Sloopy"





For a while
the only earth that Sloopy knew
            was in her sandbox.
Two rooms on Fifty-fifth Street
    were her domain.
Every night she'd sit in the window
among the avocado plants
waiting for me to come home
   (my arms full of canned liver and love).
We'd talk into the night then
     contented
but missing something.
She the earth she never knew
me the hills I ran
      while growing bent.

Sloopy should have been a cowboy's cat
with prairies to run
                   not linoleum
and real-live catnip mice.
No one to depend on but herself.

I never told her
   but in my mind
I was a midnight cowboy even then.
Riding my imaginary horse
down Forty-second street,
going off with strangers
to live an hour-long cowboy's life,
           but always coming home to Sloopy,
        who loved me best.
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A dozen summers
we lived against the world.
An island on an island.
She'd comfort me with purring
I'd fatten her with smiles.
We grew rich on trust
   needing not the beach or butterflies
I had a friend named Ben
Who painted buildings like Roualt men.
                       He went away.
My laughter tired Lillian
after a time
    she found a man who only smiled.
Only Sloopy stayed and stayed.

Winter.
Nineteen fifty-nine.
Old men walk their dogs.
Some are walked so often
that their feet leave
          little pink tracks
in the soft gray snow.

Women fur on fur
      elegant and easy
only slightly pure
hailing cabs to take them 
     round the block and back.
Who is not a love seeker
when December comes?
Even children pray to Santa Claus.
I had my own love safe at home
and yet I stayed out all one night
             the next day too.

3|

They must have thought me crazy
         screaming
             Sloopy
        Sloopy
as the snow came falling
down around me.

I was a madman
to have stayed away
      one minute more
than the appointed hour.
I'd like to think a golden cowboy
snatched her from the window sill,
                   and safely saddlebagged
   she rode to Arizona.
She's stalking lizards
in the cactus now perhaps
              bitter but free.

I'm bitter too
and not a free man any more

               Once was a time,
in New York's jungle in a tree,
before I went into the world
in search of other kinds of love
nobody owned me but a cat named Sloopy.

                    Looking back
perhaps she's been
the only human thing
that ever gave back love to me.



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