The Supplication of the Black AberdeenBy Rudyard Kipling1I pray! My little body and whole spanOf years is Thine, my Owner and my Man.For Thou hast made me—unto Thee I oweThis dim, distressed half-soul that hurts me so,Compact of every crime, but, none the less,Broken by knowledge of its naughtiness.Put me not from Thy Life—’tis all I know.If Thou forsake me, whither shall I go?2Thine is the Voice with which my Day begins:Thy Foot my refuge, even in my sins.Thine Honour hurls me forth to testifyAgainst the Unclean and Wicked passing by.(But when Thou callest they are of Thy Friends,Who readier than I to make amends?)I was Thy Deputy with high and low—If Thou dismiss me, whither shall I go?3I have been driven forth on gross offenceThat took no reckoning of my penitence,And, in my desolation—faithless me!—Have crept for comfort to a woman’s knee!Now I return, self-drawn, to meet the justReward of Riot, Theft and Breach of Trust.Put me not from Thy Life—though this is so.If Thou forsake me, whither shall I go?4Into The Presence, flattening while I crawl—From head to tail, I do confess it all.Mine was the fault—deal me the stripes—but spareThe Pointed Finger which I cannot bear!The Dreadful Tone in which my Name is named,That sends me ’neath the sofa-frill ashamed!(Yet, to be near Thee, I would face that woe.)If Thou reject me, whither shall I go?5Can a gift turn Thee? I will bring mine all—My Secret Bone, my Throwing-Stick, my Ball.Or wouldst Thou sport? Then watch me hunt awhile,Chasing, not after conies, but Thy Smile,Content, as breathless on the turf I sit,Thou shouldst deride my little legs and wit—Ah! Keep me in Thy Life for a fool’s show!If Thou deny me, whither shall I go! . . .6Is the Dark gone? The Light of Eyes restored?The Countenance turned meward, O my Lord?The Paw accepted, and—for all to see—The Abject Sinner throned upon the Knee?The Ears bewrung, and Muzzle scratched becauseHe is forgiven, and All is as It was?Now am I in Thy Life, and since ’tis so—That Cat awaits the Judgment. May I go?
Monday, September 8, 2025
The Supplication of the Black Aberdeen by Rudyard Kipling
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