Being the black sheep of the family Is all well and good until winter comes. The grass is frozen, food is scarce And those stomachs don't stop rumbling, Ever wailing to be appeased, Unaware and uncaring to the icy conditions. They're not monsters, no. They huddle together for warmth; Snow dusting their coarse wool As they stand, determined to make it through the cold. But their stomachs scream like dying beasts, And the ache is so prevalent in their empty bellies. No fat to chew on, time passes by so slowly, And that black sheep is starting to look like the odd one out. It doesn't look like food, But it does seem just enough like an other To smother any guilt that may linger At the bottom of a recently-assuaged hunger. They're not monsters, no, Because the black sheep was never one of them.