| Ode to the Cat 
 There was something wrong
 with the animals:
 their tails were too long, and they had
 unfortunate heads.
 Then they started coming together,
 little by little
 fitting together to make a landscape,
 developing birthmarks, grace, flight.
 But the cat,
 only the cat
 turned out finished,
 and proud:
 born in a state of total completion,
 it sticks to itself and knows exactly what it wants.
 
 Men would like to be fish or fowl,
 snakes would rather have wings,
 and dogs are would-be lions.
 Engineers want to be poets,
 flies emulate swallows,
 and poets try hard to act like flies.
 But the cat
 wants nothing more than to be a cat,
 and every cat is pure cat
 from its whiskers to its tail,
 from sixth sense to squirming rat,
 from nighttime to its golden eyes.
 
 Nothing hangs together
 quite like a cat:
 neither flowers nor the moon
 have
 such consistency.
 It's a thing by itself,
 like the sun or a topaz,
 and the elastic curve of its back,
 which is both subtle and confident,
 is like the curve of a sailing ship's prow.
 The cat's yellow eyes
 are the only
 slot
 for depositing the coins of night.
 
 O little
 emperor without a realm,
 conqueror without a homeland,
 diminutive parlor tiger, nuptial
 sultan of heavens
 roofed in erotic tiles:
 when you pass
 in rough weather
 and poise
 four nimble paws
 on the ground,
 sniffing,
 suspicious
 of all earthly things
 (because everything
 feels filthy
 to the cat's immaculate paw),
 you claim
 the touch of love in the air.
 
 O freelance household
 beast, arrogant
 vestige of night,
 lazy, gymnastic
 and strange,
 O fathomless cat,
 secret police
 of human chambers
 and badge
 of burnished velvet!
 Surely there is nothing
 enigmatic
 in your manner,
 maybe you aren't a mystery after all.
 You're known to everyone, you belong
 to the least mysterious tenant.
 Everyone may believe it,
 believe they're master,
 owner, uncle
 or companion
 to a cat,
 some cat's colleague,
 disciple or friend.
 
 But not me.
 I'm not a believer.
 I don't know a thing about cats.
 I know everything else, including life and its archipelago,
 seas and unpredictable cities,
 plant life,
 the pistil and its scandals,
 the pluses and minuses of math.
 I know the earth's volcanic protrusions
 and the crocodile's unreal hide,
 the fireman's unseen kindness
 and the priest's blue atavism.
 But cats I can't figure out.
 My mind slides on their indifference.
 Their eyes hold ciphers of gold.
 
 ~Pablo Neruda~
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