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        Honey 
        by Tina Barr 
            Dexter
                says after Independence they left 
                          without teaching the wasps to make honey. 
  We talk about the tree of good and evil, 
  how drink or smoke comes to live inside us, 
  like a duppy. They're hungry so the girls 
  go down beside the cruise ships and give 
  themselves for money. He shows me 
  a walking stick carved with fangs, Marley's 
  face, a pineapple and the word Jamaica. 
            First
                there was only the hut he constructed 
  from aluminum and bamboo; he sells spin toys 
  made with chestnuts, maracas filled with coffee beans, bowls from calabash,
  necklaces 
  of brown seeds from flame trees. Now 
  there are fifteen shack shops; their owners 
  had babies, and found a way to eat. Resorts 
  toss the fish heads, the bones from pork roasts. Along the roads, egrets, riding
  chestnut cows, eat  
            flies
                off their eyes. There are fruit trees all over, papaya, banana,
                plantain, ackee that's poison  
  until it splits open. My eyes take in layers  
  of teal, turquoise, navy, a streak of green  
  against a coral reef. The wind blows past 
  my ears, carrying the voice of a child, the racket 
  of stays against a mast. Those mountains hid 
  the Maroons, when the sound of gazelle horns 
  blew freedom. Under the palm-thatch kiosk 
            a
                man sells liquored juices; yellow-eyed 
  crows sit, small judges in the rafters. 
  Visitors, beer-bellied, sagging, stumble with drink, 
  line a sidewalk to gamble on small racing crabs. 
  Dexter was born in a barn somewhere in this parish. 
  He says god is around, the way the wind 
  blows palms. We can't see wind, only its roving 
  through the fronds, turning the ends, each green 
  spear threaded on the spindle of the wind. 
   
  Copyright ©2003 Tina Barr 
             "Honey" was
                  first published in The Antioch Review, and now appears
                  in The Gathering Eye, winner of the Tupelo Press Editor's
                  Prize, and due out this year from Tupelo
                  Press. To
                  purchase a copy of The
                  Gathering Eye, visit the non-profit bookstore Sacred
                  Path Books & Art. This link is provided as a service to
                  explorefaith.org visitors and registered
                  users. 
                   
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