My three guns
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My Three Guns
I have owned three guns in my day.
The first was a Crossman pellet gun
passed down from an elder brother
When I was about 10 years old.
To it and my triumphal acuity fell
Many little birds and creatures.
Lizards and rats bled from the sting of its sudden
Technical speed.
Even a hummingbird was stilled and examined
With little regret.
My second gun was a semi-automatic Remington 22 caliber
With a fiber glass stock and a scope for long-range accuracy.
This was impressive and made me feel better armed,
Able to shoot many imaginary foes in quick succession.
I took it with me one summer
When I went to work on my relative's sandhill ranch.
I showed it with pride to my cousins and uncles.
I carried it with me when we rode the pasture.
But it never interrupted anything living
Until one day, in the pickup with my uncle.
He spotted a badly diseased cow
Which he had been observing for the past month or two.
With the cruelty of wisdom
He invited me to shoot it with my most wicked,
Excellent, semi-automatic rifle.
"Really? Sure..." I said, with an awed enthusiasm.
The cow watched us passively from a rise only yards away.
I pointed it out the window, sighted the cow's head
And fired, confident it would drop like the many little crumpled
B irds of years past.
Instead it stared stupidly in our direction.
Bang! A second shot and perhaps the cow flinched
But didn't even amble away.
Sickly it stood its ground.
Bang! Finally it staggered but stood.
DIE! DIE! I screamed silently.
Bang! And finally it fell in a heap of flesh and hide.
My uncle, lesson taught,
Didn't pause to examine but started the truck
And drove on across the grass-green hills.
"It was really sick. Nothing to do."
I heard meadowlarks through my tears.
My third gun, a 20 gauge Winchester pump shotgun was my pride
On many a hunt for pheasants, ducks, geese and grouse.
I remember at the end of one long day of duck hunting
We had trudged back to the truck
Parked a couple of hundred yards from the lake,
When I spotted a lone duck flying in from the distance.
I quickly loaded.
My father said, "Don't bother it is too far."
I raised the gun, followed the duck and fired in front
Of it, knowing where it would be when it flew into the cloud
Of pellets and death.
It dropped
Instantly
like a bag from the sky.
I knew then I had achieved real skill
Delivering death from a distance.
But thirty years have passed and I wonder
Where have my guns gone?
They have disappeared like
The lives of the creatures they stilled.
The pellet gun was mercifully beyond repair
The shotgun was stolen.
I can't recollect what happened to the 22.
I do remember the deaths I inflicted.
a culture soaked in blood NYT
I add the following poem by Jorge Luis Borges because I like the poem and I believe it makes an interesting philosophical point. Objects of human manufacture can have a tendency. Guns about the house will eventually kill someone......it is their intention.
Borges: "The Dagger."
A dagger rests in a drawer.
It was forged in Toledo at the end of the last century. Luis Melian Lafinur gave it to my father, who brought it from Uruguay. Evaristo Carriego once held it in his hand.
Whoever lays eyes on it has to pick up the dagger and toy with it, as if he had always been looking out for it. The hand is quick to grab the waiting hilt, and the powerful obeying blade slides in and out of the sheath with a click. This is not what the dagger wants.
It is more than a structure of metal: men conceived it and shaped it with a single end in mind. The dagger that last night knifed a man in Tacuarembo and the daggers that rained on Caesar are in some eternal way the same dagger. The dagger wants to kill, it wants to shed sudden blood.
In a drawer of my writing table, among draft pages and old letters, the dagger dreams over and over its simple tiger's dream. On wielding it the hand comes alive because the metal comes alive, sensing itself, each time handled, in touch with the killer for whom it was forged.
At times I am sorry for it. Such power and singlemindedness, so impassive or innocent its pride, and the years slip by, unheeding.
Heston's basement
What kind of insanity is this? Proof positive of NRA dementia.
excellent hub.
I used to shoot cedar wax wings with a Daisy BB gun lined up one after another on telephone lines. You could shoot five or ten before the rest would wise up and fly.
One of my proudest moments was shooting a pheasant before my uncle got his gun up to his shoulder. I don't think he had suspected that I could hit anything, and he looked over at me amazed. I still have a Model 12 Winchester and a Remington 22 in the basement, but haven't fired either one in a long time.
Sorry guys, I tend to sympathize with you in your plight. However, I see and feel the need for guns. My husband is a police officer and he has a Glock model 22, 40 cal. I tend to feel safer with it in the house.
only the honest ones suffer with laws (hunters) while crims buy them at pub no papers at all.
I think every "law abiding citizen" should, not only own a gun but, carry at all times. It is our duty to protect our family, friends, and the defensless. Police can not "Prevent" an asault, they can only investigate afterwards.
Doug is right on and it does not have to be 100 years ago. Now, more than ever it is our right to bear arms. It is the law abiding citizens who bother to become educated that can legally carry a gun. And we work in conjunction with the laws, not to take advantage of them.














Paul Edmondson Level 4 Commenter 4 years ago
I enjoyed the story. It reminded me of a Shel Silverstein poem. Although, you didn't mention if you enjoy hunting today.
ARROWS
I shot an arrow toward the sky,
It hit a white cloud floating by,
The clould fell dying to the shore,
I don't shoot arrows anymore.