Josh Simmons quoted Postcolonial Love Poem by Natalie Diaz
How the Milky Way Was Made by Natalie Diaz
My river was once unseparated. Was Colorado. Red- fast flood. Able to take
anything it could wet—in a wild rush—
all the way to Mexico.
Now it is shattered by fifteen dams over one thousand four hundred and fifty miles,
pipes and pumps filling swimming pools and sprinklers
in Los Angeles and Las Vegas.
To save our fish, we lifted them from our skeletoned river beds, loosed them in our heavens, set them aster—
'Achii 'ahan, Mojave salmon,
Colorado pike minnow.
Up there they glide gilled with stars. You see them now—
god-large, gold-green sides,
lunar-white belly to breast—
making their great speeded way across the darkest hours, rippling the sapphired sky-water into a galaxy road.
The blurred wake they drag as they make their path through the night sky is called
'Achii 'ahan nyuunye—
our words for Milky Way.
Coyote too is up there, locked in the moon after his failed attempt to leap it, fishing net wet
and empty slung over his back—
a prisoner blue and dreaming
of unzipping the salmon's silked skins with his teeth. O, the weakness of any mouth
as it gives itself away to the universe
of a sweet-milk body.
As my own mouth is dreamed to thirst the long desire-ways, the hundred thousand light-year roads
of your wrists and thighs.
— Postcolonial Love Poem by Natalie Diaz (Page 61)