The little old man in Umberto D. has a great deal less than my grandfather, but the two are wandering around in my head together, little men passed by, but trying to keep their shirts buttoned—except Umberto is losing everything, home and dignity both torn up beneath his very feet. All he has is Fike, his little dog—"a mutt with intelligent eyes," as he puts it, the two of them children—even younger, it seems, than the pregnant girl he befriends, and whose little round face is often wet with tears. It is a sad world they live in, a miniature Italian opera, with a slow approach to the big finish—Umberto deciding to End It All, having kept his own counsel for so long only Fike knows. And the intelligent mutt's decision to foil the foolish old man is more than a rescue, it is a friend's forgiveness, with the other apologizing, the two of them in the end under a big sky at once blank and beautiful, the sadness still waiting—but held off for a while, left to be itself, while the two boys play with a pine cone.
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