Afternoon Communion
the courtesy of bees

I had a visitor in my classroom the other day. She, unknowingly, flew into a storm of cacophony and swarms of students swatting at her. She found a safe place to land and made her way over to my desk where she climbed onto a note pad and passed the time grooming herself and studying me with quiet curiosity. I was able to release her onto a Texas Sage bush right outside my classroom window.
'Tis no small thing to befriend a bee
when she finds a quiet reverie
in a patch of sunlight by my hand,
a gift of pleasant company
~
A simple thing that seems quite grand
to rest here, making no loud demands.
She takes her ease, without a care,
in this bright and loud and foreign land.
~
For this small friend I think it rare
to choose this hush we briefly share,
to pause her frantic, buzzing flight,
and borrow stillness like a prayer.
~
O little wingéd, gentle sprite,
with honeyed manners--so polite--
You beg no gift I must requite;
We've lingered here in shared delight,
and so we part, in shared delight.
About the Creator
Sara Little
Writer and high school English teacher seeking to empower and inspire young creatives, especially of the LGBTQIA+ community


Comments (4)
🎊 Congratulations on your Top Story, Greatly Written 👏 💛
Oh so wonderful to share a poetic moment with a bee. Lovely verse and we need to show more love for the bee and the wasp
I love bees so much 🥹💙 This is such a beautiful and whimsical piece, Sara!
Well, I love bees, so I was in immediately. Then I am reading and I find that this poem calls Emily Dickinson to mind in it's charming, yet powerful rhymes and cadence. As I read on, I feel the quality of the writing, which is difficult to achieve using a rhyme scheme like this. It can come across as forced or silly if the rhymes are pushed too hard, but you manage to delicately weave them together. This is fantastic.