and 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
Copyright © 2025 by Dāshaun Washington. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on October 8, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.