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Animal Crackers

The speaker is asked by a child to draw a lion and then a tiger. When drawing the lion, the speaker describes it as a lazy but proud beast that may bite if provoked. When asked to draw a tiger, the speaker envisions a beast inspired by stories of man-eating tigers. The child then pretends their toy gun is real, causing the speaker to worry about the rising tensions outside being like a jungle on fire. The speaker calms the child by offering to draw an elephant if the gun is put down, and reassures the child that the noises outside are just fireworks, not a tiger.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
322 views1 page

Animal Crackers

The speaker is asked by a child to draw a lion and then a tiger. When drawing the lion, the speaker describes it as a lazy but proud beast that may bite if provoked. When asked to draw a tiger, the speaker envisions a beast inspired by stories of man-eating tigers. The child then pretends their toy gun is real, causing the speaker to worry about the rising tensions outside being like a jungle on fire. The speaker calms the child by offering to draw an elephant if the gun is put down, and reassures the child that the noises outside are just fireworks, not a tiger.

Uploaded by

Lalithe
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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“Animal Crackers” by Richard de Soyza

“Draw me a lion.”
So I set my pen
to work. Produce a lazy, kindly beast . . .
Colour it yellow.
“Does it bite?”
“Sometimes,
but only when it’s angry—
if you pull its tail
or say that it is just another cat . . ."
But for the most part, indolent, biddable,
basking in the sun of ancient pride.
(Outside, the sunlight seems a trifle dulled
and there’s a distant roaring, like a pride
of lions, cross at being awakened
from long, deep sleep).
Then
“Draw me a tiger.”
Vision of a beast
compounded of Jim Corbett yarns
and Blake
stalks through my mind, blazing Nature’s warning,
black bars on gold.
“DRAW!”
You turn and draw the gun
on me, as if to show
that three-years-old understands force majeure
and as you pull the silly plastic trigger
all hell breaks loose; quite suddenly the sky
is full of smoke and orange stripes of flame.
BUT HERE THERE ARE NO TIGERS
HERE THERE ARE ONLY LIONS.
And their jackals
run panting, rabid in the roaring’s wake,
infecting all with madness as they pass
while My Lord
the Elephant sways in his shaded arbour,
wrinkles his ancient brows, and wonders—
if, did he venture out to quell this jungle-tide
of rising flame, he’d burn his tender feet.
“Put down that gun. If you do, and you’re good,
I’ll draw a picture of an elephant.
A curious beast that you must understand . . . ."
DONT LOOK OUT THE WINDOW—
Just a party down the lane
a bonfire, and some fireworks, and they’re burning—
No, not a tiger—just some silly cat."
Colombo, 25 July, 1983
For Dimitri, when he is old enough to understand.

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