LAUREN LISK
Commended - 2023 Tower Poetry Competition, 'The Planets'
A Black Gir Fears the Sun
a golden shovel
These days spread like caramel, sticking to my fingers like the ashes you gave him. He
Is haloed and here again, rising like helium. I must be dreaming. In this eclipse there is
A tree that wears leaves and a memory that is stuck in main sequence. Then a
Boy beneath, who’s too bloody to resemble the moon. In this light, I am almost celestial
With my skin stifled of glow like every other black body,
Except effulgent you, who has wandered in and distinguished
Itself as shadow after being laid to rest, if sounds from
Their mothers’ throats are silenced. In space it is quiet. My eyes are fixed
Anywhere but here. During summer, my ancestors plough stars
Endlessly. They do not know what it is like to be free by
Name. It is like having
Skin that burns in your light and chars itself like an
Act of self-sacrifice. They tell me tek tɛm like it is apparent
I am constantly turning in my sleep, whilst you haven’t even begun the motion
Of rotating from your grave at dawn. I wish the sunset of
Earth was blue. And you could feel as I do. This boy doesn’t deserve death and His
Orbit. This boy deserves to radiate warmth instead of the darkness that’s his own.
‘tek tɛm’ - a Krio term meaning be careful