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Authors: Naomi Shihab Nye

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BOOK: Honeybee
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When the boys are alone,

they wash the dishes with facecloths.

When a honeybee is alone—rare, very rare—

it tastes the sweetness

it lives inside all the time.

What pollen are we gathering, anyway?

Bees take naps, too.

Maybe honeybees taste pollen side by side

pretending they're alone.

Maybe the concept “alone” means nothing

in a hive.

A bumblebee is not a honeybee.

It only pretends to be.

The cell phone in your pocket

buzzes against your leg.

It's not a honeybee though. It's just a

mining bee, or leaf-cutter, or

carpenter.

You're stung by messages from people far away.

You can't make anyone well.

You can't stop a war.

What good are you?

Bees drink from thousands of flowers,

spitting up nectar

so you may have honey

in your tea.

Maybe you don't want to think about it

so much.

Pass the honey please.

During winter, bees lock legs

and beat wings fast to stay warm.

Fifty thousand bees can live in

a single hive.

Clover honey is most popular

and clover is a weed.

All the worker bees are female.

Why is that no surprise?

Well there were so many currents in it after a time,

so many streams of voices crisscrossing above

the high pasture

when she went out to feed the horses, gusts of ringing

and buzzing against her skin. Sometimes near

the biggest live oak

she paused to feel a businessman in Waxahachie

calling out

toward his office in El Paso, a mother boarding

a plane in Amarillo

waking up her Comfort girl. Hard to move sometimes

inside

so many longings, urgencies of time and distance,

hard to pretend everything you needed was right

in front of you,

bucket and feed and fence, that bundle of hay Otto

pitched inside your gate,

that rusting tractor Juan might fix someday. You

wished everything

were still right
here
, the way it used to be,

before honeybees were in jeopardy,

when the Saturday mystery episode streaming toward

your radio

was the only beam you might ride from west to east,

before we were all so strangely connected

and disconnected

inside a vibrant web of signals, and a crowded wind.

At a Halloween party, a person dressed as a baked potato says he is a filmmaker but has recently realized he is not very interested in films. He speaks in a confiding tone—sadly and softly—though I don't believe we have met before. It would be hard to know. His voice doesn't sound familiar. All I can see of him, besides dark eyes, is his aluminum foil wrapper. “It's really
intense
to discover your own work doesn't matter to you anymore,” he mourns. He can't sit down, so he leans over me, where I am seated on the floor of the kitchen of someone's house, wearing a bathrobe. “What are you?” everyone asked when I entered, and I said, “Tired.” The potato says he thought about coming as a honeybee but couldn't make the wings. This is the first year he really “bonded” with Halloween and he's surprised to have had any enthusiasm for it, since he feels so discouraged about everything else. “Maybe you just need to take a break,” I say. “How did you decide to be a baked potato, anyway? It's very innovative.” Everyone else has been asking him how many rolls of foil it took. Instead of answering, he asks how it is to be a poet. Goldilocks—or is it Dorothy?—walks into the kitchen and opens the refrigerator, revealing
an incredible heaped-up stash of food—fruit bowls, cold shrimp, cheeses and dips—where only a white door was visible before. “About like that,” I say.

Near the Atascosa County Line.

An anonymous tip.
Hello sirs, I just saw one hundred cars

Pull up to the chicken pen.

Seizure of 368 roosters and hens called a state record.

Deputies also spotted about 200 spectators.

Many scattered into the woods,

some clutching roosters in their arms.

This is my favorite line in the story.

It is hard to run carrying a mean rooster.

One mean rooster is a huge dad-gum rooster.

Why is it such a relief to read this front page story?

How many of us could gather 200 friends

for anything? Would 200 friends show

for a great violinist?

There is no pretense in this story.

Now, the neighboring story about

the invasion of Iraq, that's different.

I attended one cockfight in my life,

a pitiful bloody display, so I wandered away

toward the Sierra Nevada mountains

till everyone else was ready to leave.

On that strange day

I pledged myself further to the strange life

I have been living ever since,

away from the ring, betting on nothing,

a friend of chickens in general, friend of dust

and lost hours in which everything distant

and near falls into clearer light. I won't say

it's wrong or right but it changed everything

for me.

Lyda Rose walked through our front door and said, “Where is the sock monkey? I need him.” This surprised me. She had never shown any interest in the sock monkey before.

 

We began digging in the tall basket where stuffed animals live.

 

Lyda Rose said, “I am two and a half now, did you know that? Where is he?”

 

We threw out the snake, the yellow bunnies, battered bears, a small eagle wearing a blue T-shirt, a camel, and the bird that makes a chickadee sound if you press its belly.

 

Sock Monkey was buried at the bottom.

 

Lyda Rose clutched him to her chest. “My husband!” she said, closing her eyes dreamily.

 

I was astonished. “Your husband? When did this happen?”
She spoke clearly and definitely. “I thought of him and I married him in my mind.”

 

She ran around the dining room clutching her husband tightly, singing the song of a chickadee trapped in a human body.

 

“How great! I am so happy for you both!” I said, following her.

 

She did not answer, lost in a newlywed's swoon.

 

I said, “It is so nice that you love him now!”

 

And she stopped dancing, staring at me disapprovingly. “I didn't say I love him! I said,
he is my husband!

This Is Not a Dog Urinal

(cardboard sign propped in leafy groundcover)

No. This is not a poop-pot, a cardiovascular rescue

device, a farmer's market.

This is not a beehive, a creek bed,

a parking lot, a back alley.

This is a frilly bush in someone's personal front yard

and that someone is
sick of it
.

Take your doggie elsewhere please.

Or we will be after you with garden shears

and shovels. Have respect for someone else's

lovely landscape dream which includes neither

a tribe of slippery snails,

your doggie,

or you.

People were biting air,

snapping with smart opinions.

Everyone wanted to feel safe,

but no one would say that.

So they tried to act right instead.

For a thatched cottage

at the botanical gardens,

safety meant having a roof

water would run off,

in case of a storm.

A man traveled all the way

from England to thatch the roof.

It's a dying art.

He worked by himself

for three whole months.

Tiny windows,

cobblestone walk,

the roof smells of clean broom straw,

fresh air, meadowlands.

Now, when we stand inside it,

everything complicated

falls away. You think whatever you like,

okay? We don't have to match.

Look how the lattice of light

falls across all our feet.

I don't know why I would tell

an outright lie

to someone I never saw before

but when she asked

Did you close this door?

in an accusing tone

I said
No, the wind closed it

She gave me an odd look

pushed the door wide open

and left it that way

I felt strange the rest of the day

walking around

with a stone on my tongue

She lived with words in a tall white house.

Hundreds of books lined her shelves.

They smelled like time, they smelled like rain.

Fanning the pages, she smiled.

I was ten when I found this friend.

Cherry pie steaming on top of the stove…

We sat till it was cool.

She lit up like a lantern when I rang.

Tell about your teachers, your work
.

Who's the bad boy again?

Have you seen that dog that bit you under the eye?

The plates were stacked beside the pie.

Her husband had died before we were born,

but she didn't live alone.

She lived with words.

1.

The hermit Justiniani walked across Europe

after refusing to take his final vows.

He walked across the colonial United States,

coming to live in a cave in southern New Mexico.

Once he walked from Las Cruces

to San Antonio

for a little visit.

Justiniani led mystical prayer gatherings,

conducted healings in living rooms,

then walked 20 miles home

to his dwelling in the cave.

People worried he might not be safe,

living alone in those wild times,

as opposed to these,

sleeping without a lock,

or even a door.

He promised to light a fire every Friday night.

They could see it from town.

When the fire didn't appear,

he was found with a knife through his back,

wearing a thorny girdle of the
penitentes
,

“another unsolved murder” of those days.

Justiniani, pray for us,

our secret sorrows,

our inability to walk so far.

Pray for the signal fires we fail to light,

that we will have the power to light them.

Pray for the battered, unchosen people.

We have not come far at all

from your time.

2.

Your diary sleeps in untranslated Italian

in a locked glass case.

When I found out about it

I went a little crazy.

I need to know

what you knew.

3.

The ceiling of your cave is charred.

Along the path, clumps of cactus, desert flowers,

chips of flint.

I stood inside, trying to imagine which way

you slept in there,

pointed out or in, listening to the echo of birds

over Dripping Springs Road.

Please grant us the depth of your silence.

We are lost inside the world.

Dear Rafik, Sorry about that soccer game

you won't be attending since you now

have no…

Dear Fawziya, You know, I have a mom too

so I can imagine what you…

Dear Shadiya, Think about your father

versus democracy, I'll bet you'd pick…

No, no, Sami, that's not true

what you said at the rally,

that our country hates you,

we really support your move

toward freedom,

that's why you no longer have

a house or a family or a village…

Dear Hassan, If only you could see

the bigger picture…

Dear Mary, I'm surprised you have

what we would call a Christian name

since you yourself…

Dear Ribhia, Sorry about that heart attack,

I know it must have been rough to live

your entire life under occupation,

we're sending a few more bombs over now

to fortify your oppressors,

but someday we hope for peace in the region,

sorry you won't be there to see it…

Dear Suheir, Surely a voice is made to be raised,

don't you see we are speaking

for your own interests…

Dear Sharif, Violence is wrong

unless we are using it,

why doesn't that make sense…

Dear Nadia, I did not know about

your special drawer, you know I like

to keep a few things too that have meaning to me…

Dear Ramzi, You really need to stop crying now

and go on about your business…

Dear Daddo, I know 5 kids

must feel like a lot to lose in one swoop

but we can't stop our efforts…

Dear Fatima, Of course I have feelings

for your own people, my college roommate

was from Lebanon…

Dear Mahmoud, I wish I had time

to answer your letter but you must understand

the mail has really been stacking up…

BOOK: Honeybee
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ads

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