Old Man and His Dog An old man lived with his hound-dog, Mace, in a run-down shack on the outskirts
of town. He had no family and only a few meager possessions: a table and chair,
a bed, a bag of hand tools, and his dog. He used the tools to do odd jobs
in town, for which he usually would be paid enough to get food for the next
day. Mace and his master lived from one day to the next on what little these
jobs would bring in. The dog was just a normal hound, with one exception:
while most dogs like to chew on grass occasionally, Mace loved it. When the
old man was in town, Mace would spend the day in the yard in front of the
house, chewing away on the lawn. One bright, sunny day the old man said goodbye to his dog and headed into
town to work. He had a plumbing repair job in one of the homes there that
would take him most of the day and would probably pay enough for food for
the remainder of the week, if he managed the money carefully. He headed for
town with a spring in his step and a whistle on his lips. Inside the house
and ready to start, the old man reached in the bag for his wrench. To his
surprise, he didn't feel it. He dug around again, but there didn't seem to
be any wrench. He looked in the bag, then dumped its contents on the floor,
but still no wrench. Reality set in. Without a wrench he couldn't finish the
job, and without the pay he couldn't even buy food for that night's supper,
let alone for tomorrow. When he finally came to grips with reality, he told
the lady who hired him what the situation was. While she sympathized with
his situation, the job needed to be done. If the old man couldn't do it, she
would have to hire someone else. The old man packed up his tools and headed home, head bowed and shoulders
stooped. The whistle was gone and no longer was there a spring in his step.
A walk that normally took 15 minutes seemed to last forever. But finally the
old shack came into view, and there was Mace in the distance, munching away
as usual on the lawn. When the dog saw his master, he came running, tail wagging,
telling the old man how glad he was to see him. Kneeling beside the hound,
the man began to pet him, and through tear-filled eyes told the dog that there
would be no supper tonight and no food for tomorrow. What's more, without
money to buy a new wrench, he had no idea what the future held. It was the loneliest, most helpless feeling he ever had! Then he caught a
glimpse of something shining in the grass. As the old man went over to see
what this piece of shining material was, his despair turned in an instant
to joy! It was the wrench! The old man had dropped it on his way out that
morning, and it would have been lost forever had Mace not been eating farther
away from the house than he usually did! The old man grabbed the dog, gave
him a hug that almost suffocated him, and ran into the house. Reaching for
a stub of pencil and the only piece of paper he had, he wrote a moving tribute
to his canine companion. Few people have ever heard these words...until now,
that is. One man who did happen to read them changed them a bit and has his
name recorded in music history. The old man never did get the credit he deserved. But now you are privileged
to read the beginning line of his original poem, which went: "A grazing Mace, how sweet the hound that saved a wrench for me."