I had no place to go, no one to call my own.
I wandered up and down the streets in rain in heat and snow.
I ate whatever I could find, I was always on the go.
My skin would itch, my feet were sore my body ached with pain,
And no one stopped to give a pat or to gently say my name.
I never saw a loving glance, I was always on the run,
For people thought that hurting me was really lots of fun.
And then one day I heard a voice so gentle, kind and sweet,
And arms so soft reached down to me and took me off my feet.
"No one again will hurt you" was whispered in my ear.
"You'll have a home to call your own where you will know no fear."
"You will be dry, you will be warm you'll have enough to eat,
And rest assured that when you sleep, your dreams will all be sweet."
I was afraid I must admit I've lived so long in fear.
I can't remember when I let a human come so near.
And as she tended to my wounds and bathed and brushed my fur,
She told me "bout the rescue group" and what it meant to her.
She said, "We are a circle, a line that never ends,
And in the center there is you protected by new friends."
"And all around you are the ones that check the pounds
And those that share their home after you've been found."
"And all the other folk are searching near and far,
To find the perfect home for you where you can be a star."
She said, "There is a family that's waiting patiently,
And pretty soon we'll find them, just you wait and see."
"And then they'll join our circle, they'll help to make it grow,
So there'll be room for more like you who have no place to go."
I waited very patiently the days they came and went,
Today's the day I thought, my family will be sent.
Then just when I began to think it wasn't meant to be,
There were people standing there just gazing down at me.
I knew them in a heart beat I could tell they felt it too.
They said, "We have been waiting for a special dog like you."
Now every night I say a prayer to all the gods that be.
"Thank you for the life I live and all you've given me,
But most of all protect the dogs in the pound and on the street,
And send a "Rescue Person" to lift them off their feet."
~Arlene Pace (September 18, 1998)