Glory bee.I had the rare pleasure recently of a private Mass; that is, a Mass at which there were only two people, not counting Christ, who arrived during the Eucharist. There was the priest, and there was me. Outside the room there were two sparrows also, and inside the room, it turned out later, was a bee. I believe it was the common honey bee honey bee called also Apis mellifera. See also bee sting. , apis mellifera Apis mellifera Honeybee Immunology A major cause of life-threatening anaphylaxis in sensitized individuals Clinical Fever, chills, light-headedness, hives, joint and muscle pain, bronchial constriction, SOB, hypotension, pulmonary edema, shock, and possibly, death. , and not one of its cousins, api dorsata, floreata, cerana, or laboriosa, but I didn't get close enough for an especially good look, and neither did the priest. The Mass was in a room in a residence hall at a college because the priest and I had not been able to find a Mass being said elsewhere during a day in which we had been thrown together in the social ramble. As each of us did not wish to go a Sunday without spiritual sustenance Sustenance Amalthaea goat who provided milk for baby Zeus. [Gk. Myth.: Leach, 41] ambrosia food of the gods; bestowed immortal youthfulness. [Gk. Myth. and the nutritious nutritious /nu·tri·tious/ (noo-trish´us) affording nourishment. nu·tri·tious adj. Providing nourishment; nourishing. nutritious affording nourishment. central ritual of our faith, I found a room in a residence hall, and the priest, as he said, found the materials necessary for him to say Mass. The bee lifted off from a windowsill just as the priest finished preparing his cruets of water and wine and opened his book to begin Mass. It began to fly due north, toward the table where Mass was about to commence; it did not fly in a straight line but in a series of short zigzags, not unlike repetitive dance steps. It is interesting to note in this regard that apis mellifera, like all honey bees, conducts a dance to inform its mates of food sources. There are three dances: the round dance, the sickle sick·le v. 1. To cut with a sickle. 2. To deform a red blood cell into an abnormal crescent shape. 3. To assume an abnormal crescent shape. Used of red blood cells. dance (used only by the Italian race of mellifera), the waggle dance Waggle dance is a term used in beekeeping and ethology for a particular figure-eight dance of the honeybee. By performing this dance, successful foragers can share with their hive mates information about the direction and distance to patches of flowers yielding nectar or pollen, . The dances may indicate meals as far away as 1,000 meters. The meal of the Mass began. Opening prayers, first reading, second reading, the bee is still aloft, gospel reading, bee subsides, creed, intercessions, bringing-forth of the gifts by yours truly, bee is up, Communion, bee is down, concluding blessing, bee is up, the Mass is ended, bee is down, go in peace, and the bee is cutting dance steps in the air. The words in the air with the bee have been powerful and spare, as simple and sweet and dangerous as the bee, as potentially painful and penetrating -- like nails through palms. The priest has sung and chewed the words as if they were poems, which they are and I heard them as the first time, my mind circling and waggling, remembering the days many ago when I was a child standing in a with the Mass washing over me like a sea of sound. As a child I was picking up a fallen word here and there, and from these spent beautiful bees falling arround me, apis mellifera in the autumns of their days, the words falling on the pews on the floor and on the shoulders of the men and women around me, I built a story about the Mass, about sweet stinging Christ, about the God I heard and smelled, but could never see. I built a story about believing against all reason and rationality that God once showed his sad, radiant, brown-bearded Judean face and danced upon this earth and put Aramaic words into the dusty air. Then I heard other stories and stitched stitch n. 1. A single complete movement of a threaded needle in sewing or surgical suturing. 2. a. A single loop of yarn around an implement such as a knitting needle. b. them into my story too, and then after many years I am standing in a room after a private Mass and I am thinking that the Mass, stripped to its bones, is a fiercely persistent memoir memoir History or record composed from personal observation and experience. Closely related to autobiography, a memoir differs chiefly in the degree of emphasis on external events. , a naked meal for a naked carpenter, an act of exuberant exuberant /ex·u·ber·ant/ (eg-zoo´ber-ant) copious or excessive in production; showing excessive proliferation. ex·u·ber·ant adj. Proliferating or growing excessively. joy that he lived and died and lived. How apt that this Mass be said over a circling bee and two birds as well as one stung stung v. Past tense and past participle of sting. stung Verb the past of sting Adj. 1. man; for the Mass brings all creatures together in and under the Word, which was in the beginning, which has no end, which will always bee. |
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