Half-light – Dāshaun Washington
God said Let there be light
and we stood before the sun
shed the daylight from our selves
and donned dusk
God said Let there be light
and a moth emerged
from my molasses-black chrysalis
God said Let there be light
and we became
our blackest selves
God said Let there be light
and we became our own gods
God said Let there be light
and from the shade we watched
the sky shine her brightest
Let there be light
and day became
seemingly so
Let there be light
and night was never so black
Let there be light
and flesh became skin
and skin became colored
and the light was let in the house
and the cotton rose in the fields
and the master’s tools took shape
and an ocean kept us apart
and the indigo washed the coastline
and blue-black hands worked their fingers to the bone
and the rivers teemed with teeth
and barks ran through the woods
and the days grew darker
and the heavens rose beyond our reach
and God’s absence became apparent
and smoke poured over the mountain’s edge
and the fields filled with fire
and there was light

“This poem is the result of my interrogation of God’s role in the inhumanities of the world He supposedly created, specifically the dehumanization of Black people [which] laid the foundation for the transatlantic slave trade.” Dāshaun Washington
Poetry
- A Dog Has Died by Pablo Neruda
- A Moment of Silence – by Emmanuel Ortiz
- A Quiet Life – Baron Wormser
- A Wreath to the Fish – Nancy Willard
- Alone – Jack Gilbert
- Be Kind, Rewind – Neil Silberblatt
- Black Momma Math – Kimberly Jae
- Combat Primer – Charles Bukowski
- Crow Blacker Than Ever – Ted Hughes
- Dismiss Whatever Insults Your Own Soul – Walt Whitman
- Don’t fall in love with a woman who reads – Martha Rivera-Garrido
- Failing and Flying – Jack Gilbert
- Feel Mo – Michael Korson
- Footprints In Your Heart – Eleanor Roosvelt
- For Calling the Spirit Back from Wandering the Earth in Its Human Feet – Joy Harjo
- Forgetfulness – Billy Collins
- Growing Old – Emma Rosenberg
- Half-light – Dāshaun Washington
- Homesick: A Plea for Our Planet – Andrea Gibson
- How She Heard It – Todd Davis
- How to Slay a Dragon – Rebecca Dupas
- I Talked to a Lady – Tanya Howden
- If You Knew – Ellen Bass
- Instructions before visiting Earth – James McCrae
- KINDNESS – Naomi Shihab Nye
- Love is Not All – Edna St. Vincent Millay
- Men – Maya Angelou
- my brain and heart divorced ~ john roedel
- Ode to Those Who Block Tunnels and Bridges – Sam Sax
- Relax – Ellen Bass
- Shoveling Snow With Buddha – Billy Collins
- Sleeping in the Forest – Mary Oliver
- Small Stack of Books – Blake Nelson
- Soliloquy of the Solipsist – Sylvia Plath
- Tangled Up In Blue – Bob Dylan
- The Four Noble Truths – Jake Onami Agnew
- The History of One Tough Motherfucker – Charles Bukowski
- The Layers – Stanley Kunitz
- The Long Boat – Stanley Kunitz
- The Moon is Full Tonight – Billy Collins
- The Shyness – Sharon Olds
- The War Works Hard – Dunya Mikhail
- There Is No Going Back – Wendell Berry
- To Diego with Love – Frida Kalko
- Tryst with Death – Gina Puorro
- Two-bloods – Rolando Kattan
- Wage Peace – Mary Oliver
- War Primer – Bertholt Brecht
- What I Learned From Listening to a Stutterer – Ellen Zorin

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