Poetry The Fox and the Ocelot a verse fable in one act by Maureen Holm Narrator: Once upon a time, in the province of Blue, a fox who would be silver and an ocelot who would be grey, passed a snowy winter season huddled sound asleep in the dry, cozy hollow of a wise, old tree. The space of a blizzard gives ample room for dreams, shared quietly like breathing between a drowsy pair, who whisper in the waking pauses, mouth to ear and paw to fur, arousing brief but earnest promise, like a soft Spring rain. After the thaw of ice and snow, a gnawing hunger drove them out, the fox emerging first, to set expertly about the capture of field mice and rabbits, while the ocelot sat and watched, (dreamed and dawdled, dawdled and dreamed), then devoured the tiny bounty, greedily, in two's and three's. Fox (smiling, indulgent): Soon it will take many more. Narrator: No idea of what she meant, he bent and drew the killing remnants, bits of forest leaf and twig, from her slender, wriggling feet. Fox (Has him stand): Hark now, gentle friend: Someday soon you will outgrow the hollow of this tree, for it is your lot to profit from weakness and to inflict injury. Mark that it is mine as well to lie in wait for frailty and to outwit speed and strength. But, unlike me, you are intended to overpower your enemies and overtake your prey, to sleep, not in the hollows, but the embrace of trees, to be fanged and clawed and fleet enough by Autumn to snatch an eagle from the lofting wind. Ocelot (abashed): I am not, surely, all you say, am undeserving of such praise. Though it be in truth too late for me to change my spots, (firm) yet do I despise this golden hide, and as you would be silver, I would fain be grey, thereby the better to compromise my fate. Fox: Oh, no, 'tis I who do unworthily complain of the red I scorn as commonplace. For a silver coat would serve no end but to ornament my vanity. I warrant you shall learn of me to prey upon the summer interlude. Ocelot: I shall, I do. And keener still to know why I'm so oddly moved when you smile and curl your silken plume. * Narrator: Among the fuchsia trusses of dawning rhododendron, the swoon of midday firs, the tootled dusk of whippoorwills, and the monarch's florabunda hush, she demonstrated her unhurried skill. Fox: Fleeter prey I take by ambush, foraged rewards by plunder. I take no pride in doggéd pursuit, no pleasure in a frenzied kill. Life spills sweetest leisurely on the tip of my predator tongue. Narrator: Together, they waylaid rabbits, looted the stash of squirrels, robbed the provident, duped the rest, and grew sleek on cunning and theft. Patience came hard, but laughter as naturally as climbing. She let him fetch down luxuries beyond her highest bound, then taught him to suck the fetal savor from the uncracked shells of starlings. . . . From the night he brought her the fabled grapes, he lay wound in her silken scarf. * Narrator: Autumn signaled its beginning with tinted leaf and oblique ray, the hardened cool of shooting stars, swaths of purple phlox and goldenrod amassed at twilight in dappled clearings among the tufts of unscythed grass, as camouflage for families of browsing, lilac deer. Ocelot (awestruck): Oh, what singular creatures can these be, borne upon so tender limb, who walk not on the earth, but floating, graze upon its strands of faded green? Fox: Soft. Watch them close, the game, which you so fleet now nearly grown, shall finally stalk and feed upon: the favored meat of your maturity. Ocelot (aghast): Oh, no, not mine, not me! 'Tis a thing too lovely to be slain to satisfy a mundane need like hunger. Fox: No predator concedes advantage to his prey! Ocelot (tearful): Then, in truth, I am unworthy of the name. For, what disadvantage beauty of the flesh, if once beheld, it dies to be possessed? Fox (perplexed): Did I not promise in this summer interlude to acquaint you with my skill, and thus, prepare you for your final challenge? Now having taught you stealth and guile, I train your eye upon the proper target for destruction by your fang and claw, arrive to see you hunt not as a fox, but as the ocelot you are, and you refuse? Ocelot (pleading): Or merely seem to be. For in faith, if killing be such necessary evil, but for the beauty of these fragile few -- and of you -- I am lost. Fox: (harsh, but struggling) Then I leave you to your scruple and resume the hollow you have now outgrown. (Ocelot exits) Narrator: She went home and wept into her silken plume. * September passed and then October, shortened days without enough to eat, extended nights with all-consuming thoughts of her companion, now become, a scavenger among the empty canyons, stopping only to admire the spiraling ascent of eagles lofted by the wind. Come the thin half of November, as she lay pining in her cell, will and silken splendor much diminished, he came for her, with wordless soft persuasion, hawk eggs and owlets and whortleberries, the fairytale grapes of famine season, and led her to his mountain cave. Deep in the night, she stirred and moaned, and he awake beside, begged her, mouth to ear and paw to fur, to confess her consternation. Fox: 'Twas as though I teetered on a windy crag, clinging fast to twigs of brittle disbelief, yet awed by the heady certainty that the very next breath which I should draw would snap and blast me from its wearied safety. (tremulous) Oh, never before came I so close to the edge of reckless exhaustion! Ocelot (knowing): Then stay with me and let us sleep, with much incautious dreaming. Narrator: Together they rose to the reckless edge and slept moments later in the valley. Through the night he kept her close, but come the dawn, he ventured forth just long enough to hunt a tender morsel. And she awoke alone, instantly aware that the empty cave had dampened and taken on a gaping volume, a massive shape of black, exceeded only by the mammoth odor of overwhelming bear! Bear: How now unlucky trespasser, who intrudes (traps her tail) upon my winter habitat. Speak, Fox, or breathe your last! Fox: Oh, what lonely refuge a former truth that an autumn passed in solitude can vacate and disprove. Bear: Fie! Ill-reputed to be sly! Be done dispensing riddles with a haughty grin and convince me quickly why I do not kill you, as soon as listen to your sophistry. Fox (feigns deference): My lip is parted and aching dry as revulsion's adulating tribute, such rank respect do you, Sir Brute, compel by outlandish size and scent, moreover by the hugeness of your foot, which lies so artful bruising on my tail, but removed could free me to some servitude. Bear (smug): To what humiliating end do I enslave you then? (Releases her.) Fox: Why, to add some tasty morsels to your diet. Bear (scoffs): Hah! A feeble argument and faint incentive to trade your life for rodent entrail. Fox: Do you discount before you try it a repast of dainty mouse or rabbit, devoured as you sprawl about the fetid squalor of your cave? Bear: But twenty by the hour would hardly be enough and hard-procured, with winter proximate and hence my nap. This late, they would be sinewy and tough, thus a pittance quite unworthy of the interruption as I hibernate. Fox: But if awakened and you need to stave some ursine gluttony however minorly remitted? Bear: 'Tis not in the nature of my long repose that I should prematurely stir. Fox: And thus the likelier to occur, unless you post a constant sentry at the entrance to your noxious grotto, (attempts to slip past him, but he blocks her exit) to discourage birds that would disturb your bloated sloth so well-deserved at a Summer's end spent typically revolting most other beasts and fowl in our nostrilly afflicted province. Bear: No, Fox, I must insist: all other beasts, if I may gloat. Fox: Oh, Bear, it shall be far from me to doubt the valorous authority of your unfailing flatulence. Bear: Nor I your cunning flattery. Yet, withal I do suspect you are too small of stature and too slight of fighting skill to see, much less to capture, the odd adventurer on my hill. Fox: Agreed. 'Tis an argument I must concede to the ferocity of your stench, meaning to ascend the leafless tree that stands just next your entrance, the better to detect (attempting to exit gradually) and rid you of the twitter that else by useless nesting would importune your reeking rest. Bear (retraps her tail): Too clever, Fox! Think you then that I know not your woeful kind all lack the claws to make an enterprise of climbing trees? Though mine can make fast work of you. Fox (arch): I duly note the hirsute length and gnarl of two at the extreme end of my person. Bear (fierce): The better to take the rending measure (stomps) of all ten around your throat! (towers over her) Fox (timid): Wait! A minority among my species are rich-bestowed with silver coats, which, while truly fine as ornament, preclude the owner from ascending trees, whereas we more agile because less vain, but inelegantly russet, have much facility for which we are content. (regaining confidence) What's more, my showy plume could lend itself as warning banner, unfurled to great advantage to dissuade unwanted elements, were it not at present trammeled by a churl's too weighty paw. Bear: You lie! If vanity made for discontent, why then my cousin, being like too rich-bestowed in white, should hate to gorge on fish in polar oceans as much as I to ford an icy stream and swat at bounding salmon, (swats over her head as she cowers) too oft with mean result. Fox: Aha! But has he a tree to clamber up, much less to rub against? Bear: Agreed. I must not be incontinent. Fox: No, please! Least not while yet a burden on my disheveled flag! (Distracted, he releases her.) Bear: But if no tree, then logically no bird to perturb him while he sleeps, and thus is he more fortunate indeed than I, who perceive the slightest stirring. (Ocelot growls low, perched in tree outside.) What noise? Fox: Perhaps a rustled leaf on yonder peeling birch. Bear: The same which late you misdescribed as 'leafless'? Fox: By a figure of speech. Bear: What species then of squawking pest, for hawk and eagle do I so abhor that I would separate them wing from wing. Fox: Perhaps not squawk but growl. Bear (Snatches her tail.): A growling fowl? Fox: You misheard the bird, for I said . . . 'owl', having caught a shadowed glimpse of spotted black on golden hide, or no that would be wing, which would of course be feather. But, Sir! If now you turn to look, you sever utterly my quill, which you will need to use as banner and I in altogether subtler manner. Bear (Distracted, releases her): Cannot be an owl in fact, if not leopard-spotted, and an able predator in flight, (gentle) so soft of feather it makes no sound whatever swooping to attack. Fox: Be proud, Bear, to be not duped. Withal, this is no ordinary spotted owl. (Aside) Nor ordinary leopard either on the prowl. Bear: Which because it preys by night must sleep by day. Fox: Right you say! Thus, if it be an owl and cannot sleep, what meager hospice this accursèd tree, which, worse, but for employing my facility, you would have to climb and occupy yourself. Bear (Pauses): Oh! What dilemma, logically, wherein I need your help! Fox (laughs): Now how shrewdly you conclude, and so astutely have you just removed the former imposition on my flagging plume, that I bid you, Brute, adieu! * Narrator: In a swirl of red, she fled the cave, but the blackness, dazed and baffled, caught no glimpse of the spotted gold, poised and pitiless in the desperate birch, alert to his fox's every word, dreading her sudden sigh, and rehearsing the ambush of giant bear by ocelot courage and love. Baying trombone of frustrated brawn, the Grendel lurched from his hideaway, oak-snapping jaws in a rabid froth of murderous, headlong pursuit. But the cat, trained on the target of talon and fang, launched from his blistering roof and hit home like the bullet of slingshot faith that put out Goliath's eyes. Tooth to scalp and claw to gullet, Ocelot clung to Bear, a contorted flurry of heave and swipe and bleeding from ravaged fur, whirling about in a snarled circle of red-ribboned black and black-dotted gold; blood being offered, blood was lost, as the fox stood by and watched. Talons embedded in jowl and snout, Bear thrust up his batttered head and reared like an untamed horse, arching to fall over backwards and crush the cathawk strapped to his withers, that sprang free with a final joust, as Bear collapsed in a bloody heap, clutching his missing right eye. (Exit Bear, yowling.) Fox (triumphant): Be gone and so good riddance! Oh, just listen to him caterwaul, outsmarted and outmauled, retreating down the hill! (Rejoins Ocelot downstage center.) No doubt he will not soon forget the lessons of this duel. Ocelot (somber): Nor we. Nor we. His hollow eye, and now its lonely mate, will be reminders to us all of the solitary habitats a fatted season squanders, the passionate alliances a famine season feeds, and the overclose allegiance borne by want to savagery. (brightens) Still, a half-blind bear is not half-seeing, who should he find no lair tonight, can openly sleep well and unmolested. (playful) Not so a would-be silver fox with scant facility for climbing vines, but an evil craving for the grape. Fox: Ah, 'tis not so much the luxury I long for as 'tis the wanton fable. (They clasp hands, then entwine and exit slowly as Narrator concludes.) Narrator: It became a tale he oft recounted in the safety of their cave, whispered mouth to ear and paw to fur, and they lived happily ever after. ©1994, 1996 Maureen Holm All Rights Reserved Image: Foxes (Franz Marc) |