short summary of the DEATH of the wolf by toru dutt
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The poem "The Death of the Wolf" is from Dutt's A Sheaf Gleaned in French Fields (1876), and is a translation of an Alfred de Vigny poem. It describes the hunting and killing of a male wolf, and subsequently, the speaker's realization of the quiet pride of nature. The poem opens with a group of hunters trekking through the woods, having "already tracked" a family of wolves. Suddenly, "the oldest" among them crouches and picks up the prints of this family, "two wolves full-grown, followed by two cubs," in the sand. After coming upon the wolves, the speaker remarks that they appear as "joyous greyhounds," and he speaks of the she-wolf nursing her cubs as if she were a classical statue, a "marble image." Meanwhile, the male, father wolf strangles one of the hunting dogs and is killed by knives and gunfire. The male wolf dies with dignity and quietude, "deigning not to know whence death had come."