are gebideð,
metudes miltse,
þeah þe he modcearig
geond lagulade…
wadan wræclastas.
are bone-cold, as are the wax walls
which were our flexible floors
and the pantries packed with nectars none
now taste; barren of the bustle
and thrum of its people, our humming palace
stands hollow and still.
Where are the women, gathered together
to comb the children, balancing burnished
orange pollen pressed into panniers,
fanning nectar of frost aster
and blackberry bloom, sugars of silverbell
and glad goldenrod, into strong sweets
for winter warmth? Far-flown,
rowing their single wing-ships alone,
exiles and refugees on the endless roads
of the sky, to sink at last, lost
and confused. How quickly they
fled the floors of wax and wood;
how quiet, now, the queen kneels,
that peace-giver who breathed grace
and comfort up through the colony’s
stacked stories. Soon she’ll be shut
in a broad black earth-chest;
and though in her glory she gave life
and life and life, slave to the hive,
raised up the gleaming ranks
and soft cells of ivory larvae,
no heir in her amber chamber waits
to wake and mate, not one daughter.
We six who stayed with her
creep or crawl our few aimless, helpless
inches, dazed with misfortune, too dismayed
even to strike at the shocked keeper—and
we were once brave battlemaids
in August’s weapon-weather, fearless
foragers, tender foster-mothers.
Who will remember now the rotating
cluster, its seats at the feast?
or the dance in the dim entry, summoning
sisters to glean the sourwood gold
of summer, bear it bright to six-
sided cups in warm combs
that throbbed with song, quivered and shimmered
with the endless generations? Griefs grow
countless as white clover as we whisper
the name-scents of nurslings and sisters.
If this world’s foundation is not all waste,
how shall we know? Where shall
the last of legions, left solitary,
find grace for herself, or her queen?
—Keeper, do even you know
what brought our bright rooms to ruin
and slips us into the sleep of the sting,
or what drink the flowers drew in
from the roiled air and the rain,
that pillaged the pillared honey-halls
and made mad our strong sisters,
leaving only the drumming
of the north wind’s needles on the steel
ceiling that shields silent halls
haunted by hive-beetles? It is true,
after all, what the old told us,
that at last all happiness
flows cold, all this world’s
stores of sweetness are fleeting and brief.