There's been a dead sheep
out in Brent's wheat field for a month. Emilio had a band of ewes on the
corn stalks across the road. I reckon that one got hit by a car.
The sheep have moved on. Brent plowed his field. Plowed around the
carcass. Now it is sort of mouldering into the earth. I see it every
time I drive to town. Nobody pays much attention to it. It's rural out
here. But we had company last week. Town folks. They seemed a little
upset that we'd just drive by a dead sheep day after day and not give it
a second thought.
It reminded me of my trip to the nation's capital. The parks and
sidewalks speckled with people, beggars and winos. I couldn't help but
notice them. Where do they live? How much do they make a day holdin' out
a cup? Do they sleep in the park?
When I expressed my concern about these ragged folks, the locals
seemed surprised. They hadn't given it much thought, they said. Welfare
or the soup kitchens, they guessed. This human flotsam was just part of
the landscape, like bus fumes and potholes.
I wonder what sort of furor would erupt if there was a dead sheep at
the corner of 9th St. and Pennsylvania Ave.? Would they just haul it off
or would there be an investigation? Would it be a police matter, the
State Department, Department of Agriculture, the local human society?
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