Summer House
Curtains at the kitchen window, lace
symmetrical as the cells of a hive,
and I remember the way shadows
of the scraggly apple tree fell
across the bed, water cold from the well
and a dark map spreading
across the plaster wall beside your
mirror. "The lost continent," you called
that stain, the house calm, the heavenly
smell from a maze the local
bees had tunneled into the structure,
and at dawn, the restless song
of a working swarm, steady as the stream
under the ailing elm. That was the extent
of my nature lore, the spreading ichor
of flowers, an essence of forgiveness,
honey oozing dark as a badger
into the foundation. The the August quarrels
and slow sorrow, the walls softening
to fall, petal by petal.