I witnessed two murders yesterday. One near my house. The other down at the lakefront. I think both can be classified as justified. They were both the result of creatures just making an honest living.
The
murder near the house involved a juvenile cat-faced spider. I happened by the
spider’s web just as a hapless fly smacked into, and stuck to, a couple of
strands. The spider instantly flung itself upon the fly and, with the dexterity
and speed of a pastry chef, wrapped its prey into the silky spider equivalent
of an apple turnover.
Later,
while mowing the grass at the lakefront, a flash of motion caught my eye. When
I swung my attention in that direction, I witnessed, no more than fifty feet
from me, an osprey plunge into the shallow water just offshore. The bird
emerged from the showy splash of water clutching a keeper-sized walleye. With
the fish in its talons, the bird flapped mightily to regain its place in the
air above the water before churning off just above the surface of the lake
toward the far side.
I
try not to anthropomorphize such things. These are not human events, even
though I witnessed them. And I know most of us feel nothing in particular when
buying steaks and hamburger in pretty little packets, but behind those packages
is an impersonal, cold, automated slaughterhouse into which live cattle plodded
before being dispatched and converted into “product.”
The
spider and raptor were simply making an honest living in broad daylight.
—Mitchell
Hegman




