Poetry - Issue 7 | November 2009
My Friends, the Bees
by Wally
My Friends, the Bees
for John Maziarz
The winter night you helped me
untie the mattress from the top of the car,
and we carried it upstairs, all you said was:
We will find a river. With that I was alerted
to the currents that flowed inside you.
Then into spring and through fall, you held
ladders, while I painted tall Victorian peaks
and gripped the shutters you handed to me;
more than just the stickiness of paint between us.
You began stories with Well, yass,
and I followed you coon hunting over expanses
of swamp abundant with pussy willow.
You would punch the time clock the next morning
at the factory, spent, but full of the river
you had found. That next spring at dusk,
when the smell of damp earth rises, you led me
to the abandoned servants’ quarters, only days
before a doctor’s diagnosis of cancer, and there,
where a broken water pipe made a right angle
over the blossoming hawthorne, came the dripping
from the hive, that first covered your index finger,
then flowed over your entire hand with a buzzing
that matched the quiver in your voice,
when you declared, My friends, the bees.
About the author
Wally Swist’s recent poems appear in From the Other World: Poems in Memory of James Wright (Lost Hills Books, 2007), and Puckerbrush Review, among others. A recipient of poetry fellowships from the Connecticut Commission on the Arts, Wally Swist has recently published Mount Toby Poems (Timberline Press, 2009).