A new poem by Ruby Solly.
Kōauau kōiwi
Ko au ko te iwi
It starts with mouth on bone
But really
it starts anywhere it can
From the centre of a note
from the tuwiri drill
shaping black holes
to the marrowless tunnel
of DNA singing the songs
of its people
We call it whakapapa
You call it family tree
Either way
like a bone
a tree can sing
Te whē is when the tree creaks
its music into the world
as it did in the beginning
when they grew from the darkness
Like the inside of this kōauau
dark and warm with breath
puts the white of bone
behind the instant night of closed eyes
of holes bored then covered
with hands descended
from song and flesh
and bone.
Kōiwi, ko iwi, bone of my bone
Ko iwi, kōiwi, at home in its tone
Kokowai painted tīpuna
Held gentle in a cave
Three-day biblical weight extended
to a cycle of stars
to a calling of names in stereo
The uncovering
of red-stained white
The sound you only hear
from tīpuna or enemy
Pied piper piping a pied pipe
for angry descendants
or soothing sound weaver
calling the ancestors in
to hold you in their bone song
This poem is taken from Now and Then: Poems about Generations, a forthcoming anthology by Landing Press, published on the 21st of October. The featured image is taken from a larger, original painting by Ruby Solly.
The Friday Poem is edited by Hera Lindsay Bird. Submissions are currently closed.