Aloha, Lili’uokalani Poem by Kirby Wright

Aloha, Lili’uokalani

Queen Lili’uokalani, where is our aina?
My memories are a mixture of slack key,
Plumeria, and Kona wind in the trees.
I measure the trades with a desperate tongue.
Kapiolani is a park. Kaiulani is a hotel.
It is no longer enough to watch
The winter tide test the persistence of shores.
Lili’uokalani, do you see what I see?
Do you see my hotel uniform drying
On a balcony overlooking H-1 Freeway?
Honolulu windows burn a thousand suns.
But it keeps raining out at sea.
The rain comes warm, unexpected.
Do you, Queen Lili’uokalani,
Hold back tears for what you lost?
Did you carry your grief into heaven?
Paradise falls to us in pieces,
Pieces governed by the highest bidders.
Their blueprints cover sacred land with walls.
Walls to protect investments.
Walls to exclude the less fortunate.
Walls to keep Hawaiians out.
Kapus make Hawaii a land of strangers.
Beach access is a narrow path between estates,
A strip of crushed coral and flowering weeds.
Sometimes I see the rich dipping their toes
In the chlorine safety of oceanfront pools.
Dear Lili’uokalani, Hawaii is fee simple.
Hawaii is fair market value.
Hawaii is for sale and already sold.
A shadow falls on Iolani Palace.
Now Kalakaua is an avenue
Ruled by stoplights and crosswalks.
Likelike and Kamehameha
Are remembered only as highways.
The majority encourages progress.
The majority is no longer Hawaiian.

Aloha, Lili’uokalani
Monday, July 20, 2015
Topic(s) of this poem: loss
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
This poem appeared at the Queen's statue on the grounds of Iolani Palace during the 100-year anniversary gathering of the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy. It went on to win the Browning Society Prize for Dramatic Monologue.
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
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Kirby Wright

Kirby Wright

Honolulu, Hawaii
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