On Seeing A Bee Drink His Nectar
by Wesley Sexton
Here I sit almost 25 years old,
never knowing how a bee drinks 
its nectar til today, having followed one 
from geranium petal to geranium petal, 
leaning in close, seeing his tiny hands 
grab each tiny flower, watching him 
extend a shining, black cone 
from the center of his face to lap up 
the sweet stuff. It’s a dipping tongue, 
apparently, which I was calling a 
retractable nose, and butterflies 
have one too, and I don’t know
how I made it this long never properly looking 
at a bee! We should have entire grades 
dedicated to this stuff and other grades 
set aside for looking up at oak trees from underneath. 
My ignorance of the world is oversized, 
like a shirt. It has sleeves that drag the ground 
when I walk. Once, my neighbor told me 
how a robin keeps her nest clean: 
that the young never leave the nest, so
the mother will carry her birds’ waste 
in her mouth and make deposits in the grass 
somewhere. It’s true. My neighbor has watched 
this happen, she tells me, and all at once I love her, 
want to marry her impulsively, buy a big house 
just for the porch, and spend the rest of our lives 
uncovering the daily routines of moths,
listening to the sound spiders make 
when they slurp liquefied guts, wondering 
what chipmunks dream about, and if they kick 
their legs in their sleep like a dog sometimes does. 
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