I fell in love with basset hounds when I was in the ninth
grade. Waiting outside for the school doors to open, my best friend and I
noticed a droopy dog across the street. We became smitten and named it “Harold.”
We made up a song about basset hounds to the tune of “Jesus Loves the Little Children”:
Jesus loves the little bassets
All the bassets of the world.
Their long ears and their big feet,
Golly gee, they’re really neat!
Jesus loves the little bassets of the world.
Soon, we noticed “Harold” surrounded by a litter
of puppies, so we renamed her “Haroldine.”
My mother was strenuously anti-pet, so I did not
adopt my first basset, Noble, until I left home. That basset was stolen from my
yard one night. Years later, I adopted my second basset, Beaumont, while in
graduate school in Carbondale, Illinois. Beaumont’s story is a sad one which I
will leave untold.
When I got a job teaching college in Poultney,
Vermont, I adopted Herself the Elf, my soul-mate basset. I spent many happy
basset years with Elf. As she grew into a senior basset, I adopted Hermia.
Hermia grew, Elf crossed the Rainbow Bridge, and finally Hermia crossed the
Rainbow Bridge, as well, in 2007.
Occasionally, people ask me if I am going to get
another dog, and I wonder if I get another dog if I will “re-cur,“ once again
playing around with prefixes, as I enjoy doing. However, since I am a devoted
basset lover, if I get another hound, I will not be “re-curring,” as the “American
Heritage Dictionary” defines a cur as “A dog
considered to be inferior or undesirable; a mongrel.”
However, the word “recur” as
defined in the dictionary basically means a repetition or returning to
something. So if I were to get another basset, I would be recurring in a way,
returning to being owned by a basset or repeating the experience of living and
loving a basset. But as for now, in exploring retirement I have chosen to
remain empty-nested of bassets.