My son asks what dragonflies
are for, if not just pretty. Bees we know
drink catmint, the fat striped
ones sweet enough to touch.
When I was my son's age
my aunt caught one sleeping on a bottle
and held out her hands, clasped like
the concave end of a spyglass:
Look at the bee. Do you want to hold it?
At my grandfather's funeral
I was allowed to take one flower
from the blanket on the casket. It was
enormous, the cost of all
those flowers in late December.
Thirty years later, his wife looked
like a stranger without her glasses,
like a baby swaddled
in an embroidered pink casket liner, the cost
shared between four daughters, and still
my mother hates the sight
of poinsettias, and still I regret the stringy mum
I took at the cemetery and never pressed, recall the porch:
tweezing a splinter out of his thumb
one evening not too long before he died, he smiled.