Hugh Lofting's Doctor Dolittle converses with animals |
Akulina and Her Cow
Akulina is a single mother raising her two sons in the Russian village of Unkurda. While she does have female friends, she usually keeps her deepest thoughts to herself. Only when she is alone with her animals does she verbalize her thoughts and feelings. In this excerpt from Slogans: Our Children, Our Future, Akuliina tells her milk cow, Belyanka, about the boys' erroneous belief that owning a cow makes them rich and an enemy of the people.
***
“Did you know you lived in a palace? Ah, yes, Belyanka, I have it
from a very good source.” Akulina's swept her arm around the cow's
surroundings, a simple wooden cowshed, wide enough for two stalls and
strong enough to keep out the wind and snow but little else. “Yes,
we are rich. We are aristocracy, nou? Soon I will be invited
to the grand balls in the estates of the pomieshtchnik.”
Akulina pulled a hot stone from her apron and rubbed it with her
hands. “What do you think I should wear? The red gown with the
ermine fur? Perhaps the blue one with golden trim and diamonds? Of
course, how foolish of me. I have but one dress. Perhaps it hangs a
bit loose, but it is still a good dress, is it not Belyanka?”
Akulina and Her Cat
Through this sarcastic discourse with her cow the reader learns Akulina, though poor, has a wry sense of humor about her sons' attitudes. Later in the story, Akulina pours out her emotions to her murdered cat, Petruska. The scene ends with Akulina breaking down and seeking Belyanka's comfort.
* * *
Akulina picked up the cat's limp form, cradled him in her arms and
stroked his fur. Petrushka's head dangled at an unnatural angle as
Akulina carried him to a corner of the cowshed. His once bright
eyes, glazed over by death, again asked, “Why did I have to
die?”
“Superstition,” Akulina replied in answer to the cat’s silent
question. Did people believe a simple cat could be the devil just
because it once lived with a wise old woman and now lived with
someone who could cure? “Superstition and ignorance, Petrushka.
Superstition and ignorance killed you.”
Akulina knelt down and began to remove straw away from the wall.
“You stay here until I find you a fit burial place. You were a
good cat, Petrushka, but I don't want the boys to know.” Akulina
covered the body with straw and patted it down. “'Where's
Petrushka?' they will ask. 'Oh,' I will reply, 'he wandered off.
You know cats.'“ Then she began to tremble.
Tears splashed down her cheeks and her body began to shake. She heard
herself wailing uncontrollably. Her sobs came in gasps and her
shoulders ached from the spasms. “It's just a cat,” she choked.
“Just a cat.” But she realized it was more than a cat for which
she wept. All the pain and suffering she had shut away breached
their walls and came flooding back. She cried for the boys who died
in the woods and those who passed from the winter sickness. She shed
tears for the men at the gallows, those buried in the meadow, and for
Old Rosina. Her tears were for her mother, may God rest her soul,
who died from her mistake. She cried for her father's burden, Kataya
and her sons' loss of innocence and the world still to come.
Akulina stumbled over to Belyanka's stall and held the cow with her
arms. She needed someone or something to hold. She did not want to
be alone. Akulina pressed her face against Belyanka's neck and
continued to weep.
* * *
Boris Speaks To Dead People
If your antagonist or protagonist has a dog, horse or any animal, use it as a sounding board. Express whatever is on your character's mind through them. Sometimes the object of your character's soliloquy may not even be animate. In Slogans. Boris often sits alone at the table and argues with his dead wife attempting to justify his decisions.
"I'm sorry, Maria." (Alfred Eisenstaedt,) |
* * *
“I was wrong about those in charge. I wanted to believe it did not
matter. I told moy droug, 'governments, bah. They are all
the same. They're all crooked.'“ Boris' words were now flowing,
however unsteady. “Fedora Popovich was correct. Hutava is no more
and Siberia is our home. We have no choice but to live here.”
Boris stared down at his bottle and shook his head. “I am between
the hammer and the anvil, or so they say. The Whites kill the poor
and the Reds kill the rich. You know I am not rich, Maria, and I
must apologize for what I must do”
* * *
The Doctor Dolittle Effect can be a handy tool in writing your novel. For your writing and reading enjoyment, add it to your arsenal and give it a try.
I've been watching the HBO special Chernobyl. In episode 4, teh army was evicting the citizens of the surrounding area. One was an old woman with her milk cow. My character Akulina would have reacted the same way. Heartbreaking.
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