Scientists used to say that the bumblebee,
Was not designed to fly,
But the bumbling bumblebee
Says I can’t help but try.
She fumbles and she tumbles,
And she bumbles all around,
Then her wings shift her and they lift her,
And she leaves her nest there on the ground.
She buzzes just above the blooms,
And looks the garden over,
And says to herself, “Who but me,
Will pollinate the Red Clover?”
In the haying season,
Sometimes her nest is found,
By mean little boys,
Where it lies there on the ground.
They place a half filled water jug,
By the hidden nest,
Then they poke and anger the bumblebees,
And call it all a jest.
The bees hear the echo in the jug,
And think they are in danger,
Then dive into the bottle’s neck,
To defend against the stranger.
Once every single bee from the hive,
Is in the water jug,
The boys find the bumbler’s nest,
And then they rob the bug.
For boys find the nest to be,
A sweet summer treat,
And once the honey eaten, they dump the bees,
Their work then to repeat.
At least that’s how it used to be,
Before the tractor came,
Followed by the chemicals,
Which were followed by the blame.
And in this age of progress,
And “hurry” on the farm,
The bee has become a casualty,
And should be an alarm.
There is more to heaven and earth they say,
Than man’s philosophies,
And in our pompous pride and peril,
We neglect the humble bees.