Do you remember how we went, on duty bound, to feed the crowd of hungry dogs your father kept as rabbit-hunters? Lean and loud, half starved and furious, how they leapt against their chains, as though they meant in mindless rage for being fed, to tear our childish hands instead! With tomahawk and knife we hacked the flyblown tatters of old meat, gagged at their carca** smell, and threw the scraps and watched the hungry eat. Then turning faint, we made a pact, (two greensick girls), crossed hearts and swore to touch no meat forever more. How many cuts of choice and prime
our housewife hands have dressed since then-- these hands with love and blood imbrued-- for daughters, sons, and hungry men! How many creatures bred for food we've raised and fattened for the time they met at last the steaming knife that serves the feast of d**h-in-life! And as the evening meal is served we hear the turned-down radio begin to tell the evening news just as the family joint is carved. O murder, famine, pious wars … Our children shrink to see us so, in sudden meditation, stand with knife and fork in either hand.