Cobalt
on the hill the powerlines
hook the sky down on me
i think, that blue isn’t human
or machine
can it feel the puncture
of us keeping the lights on?
can it see the interface
between me and the cows?
i think, my sister told me,
we’ve never really touched—
that our atoms keep an
opening between them
and it must be the heavens
or airspace in that orifice,
or the downtown of every
place we’ve never been in.
i think, when the doctor
lifted up my left tit
he broke the science
between us
really took the sky out
took the photographs
and even the molecules
ran home.
i think, my friend said
that there’s only her siblings
under this sun, that you
could image this hot ball
of life from space, and
she’s got four specks to call home to,
she meant that sometimes
we could all do
with an intervention.
i think, my aunty said
that we must speak
words of life
over our bodies
she meant, there’s been
ten dead loves in one
cycle of sun,
and that is a blue
that stays in
the soil,
in the bed,
in the kitchen.
aunty holds her
father
on the toilet
on a screen
i hold her
daughter
and in it all
a fat expanse
a celestial hand
says
tomorrow
tomorrow
tomorrow.
Isla Huia (Te Āti Haunui a-Pāpārangi, Uenuku) is a te reo Māori teacher, writer, and musician. Her debut collection of poetry, Talia, was released in May 2023 with Dead Bird Books.