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Alluvium

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Wei Shiwen -《论普遍性》(a translation of ‘On Universality’ by Cyril Wong)

论普遍性

 

本勒纳在《仇恨诗歌》中写过,

“世人皆可成诗,”并设问

“诗人内心所想是否……

 

可以引起共鸣,无论多少,哪怕一人……?”

可能是我不是个美国人吧

 

或是我从不是个入世之人

我则经常想“当然不!”

我在为你写诗吗?(当飞机在气流中颠簸,

 

而你坐在我旁边看动作片的时候)

算了吧,我明明是在为我自己——或是为了

 

未经尘世磨难、打击和挫折的千千万万个我/我们

所以我的诗

是写给我自己的话。

 

 

On Universality

 

Ben Lerner writes in The Hatred of Poetry,

“Everybody can write a poem,” and asks if

“the distillation of your innermost being …

 

[can] make a readership, however small, a People …?”

Maybe because I’m not American

 

or because I was never a Universalist,

I’ve always thought, “Of course not!”

I write for you (as you watch your action-movie

 

beside me on a plane drifting through turbulence)

but more likely for me—or the infinity within me/us

 

that doesn’t toss, swell or shrink beyond

the vicissitudes of self, the words we tell ourselves.

 

– Cyril Wong

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Yu Yan Chen – “The Pink Coach” (a translation of《粉红色大车》by Li Juan)

Yu Yan Chen (陈瑜燕) is an award-winning poet and literary translator. She won Singapore’s Golden Point Award in 2015 and garnered the top prize at the Flushing Poetry Festival in 2019. Her first poetry collection, entitled Small Hours, was published by the NYQ Books in 2011. Her second poetry Grandma Says (祖母说), was published in 2017. Her translation of The Chief Cellist, a children’s book by Taiwanese author Wang Wenhua, was published by the Balestier Press in 2015. She currently resides in Singapore and has translated short stories, essays and poems by Yi Sha, Mai Jia, Li Juan, Han Dong, and Zheng Xiaoqiong.

Li Juan (李娟) was born in 1979 in Xinjiang Province. She spent her childhood in remote towns in both Sichuan and Xinjiang. She used to work on the assembly line, but became a government employee at a later time. In 2007 she resigned to write full time. Her works center on her sensitive meditations while living among the Kazakh nomads of the Altay region. Her prose collections include Nine Chapters of SnowCorners of AltayMy AltayPlease Sing Out Loud while Traveling through the Night, and Remember Little, Forget MoreCorners of Altay has been translated into French and Korean. She has also won a number of prestigious awards including the People’s Literature Award, Zhu Ziqing Prose Prize, Mao Dun Literature Prize, and Shanghai Literature Prize, among others. She currently lives in Altay, Xinjiang.

 

Li Juan – “The Pink Coach”

(translated by Yu Yan Chen)

 

Ever since the pink coach started its route, we never used the minivan to go to town anymore; the fare was 20 yuan per person, but it only costs 10 yuan for the pink coach. It used to be that additional fares were charged when your luggage was slightly bigger than usual, whereas now you could load freely. Most importantly, there was suddenly a proper schedule for the coach, unlike the minivan that always had to wait until it was full, delays be damned.

‘The pink coach’ was really just a used, medium-sized coach. The driver was on the chubby side, and happy as a hippo. Whenever he saw someone running toward the road from far away, making a long trail of footprints in the snow, he would ever so joyfully apply the brake and say, “Ah-ha! Ten more yuan is coming!”

All the children inside the coach would then shriek a collective “Whoa!” – as though commanding a horse to stop.

With six of my fellow passengers and I packed into the tiny space between the engine and the front row, we were already full to the brim. However, when the coach arrived at Wanahara Village, five more people and two sheep squeezed in. By then I could hardly move my arms, which gave me a strange urge to hop on top of the two sheep. Luckily, as more and more people got on, the unheated coach began to warm up, and the few men sitting in the back row began to drink alcohol, soon moving on to cheering and singing. About an hour later they got into a brawl and the driver threw every one of them out. Finally we were able to breathe properly.

Although there were very few villages dotted along the Black River, quite a number of passengers rode the pink coach to the Qiakuertu Township every day. The coach set out before five every morning, its lonely shadow crossing the dark villages one by one, honking on the way and waking up window lamps one at a time. While the honking still echoed in the previous village, the next village was already awake, and people stood by the roadside wrapped in layers, their luggage in a big pile on the snow.

Akehara was the last village to the west along this strip, which made it the first village on the daily route of the pink coach. As a result, I was always the first to get on. The inside of the vehicle felt empty and cold, thick with the warm air from my breath. The driver would greet me in a loud voice over the noisy engine, “How are you, young lady? How is everything?” Meanwhile, he would lift up a heavy sleeveless jacket made of sheepskin from the seat next to him and throw it to me. I would catch it and wrap it around my knees.

The night was still deep and the snow heavy. Before us the Gobi Desert stretched vast and expansive, with not a single tree in sight. I had no idea how the driver kept track of the road and the vehicle on pavement without once going astray, since it was the same colour as the ground.

As the sky lit up, the coach was already packed with people, yet it remained bitterly cold. Being inside the vehicle at minus 20 to 30 degree Celsius for a long period of time had taken a toll on me. Then suddenly, out of the corner of my eye, I saw two chubby old people sitting on top of the engine cover in front of the first row, facing each other. How warm it must be! So I forced my way to the spot and planted myself in the gap between them, sitting on the luggage that was stuffed in by their feet. Feeling much more comfortable at last, I soon discovered – rather embarrassingly – that they were actually husband and wife.

This couple held hands all the way, but they had no place to put them, so they rested them on my knee. I also had no place to put my hand, so I placed it on the old man’s leg. Later on, the old man’s large hand held on to one of mine to warm it up, while mumbling something to his wife. Soon the old lady took my other hand to keep it warm. Along the way I shrank my hands back quite a few times, but the couple quickly took them again.

Despite the string of comings and goings, the coach seemed to remain full of passengers. Most of them were hitchhiking, in the process of walking from one village to another in the snow. When they saw the pink coach, they waved and hopped on. In fact, even if they hadn’t asked the coach to stop, the driver would have stopped in front of the pedestrians anyway. The passenger sitting by the door would then greet them in a loud voice, “You want a ride? Come quickly! It’s freezing!”

The number of passengers reached its peak on Sundays. They were mostly children of Han ethnicity from a village on the lower bank, going back to school in the county town, since there were no Mandarin-speaking schools nearby. They all waited by the roadsides of their villages. As soon as the coach came to a halt, a father would hop on first, fight his way through the crowd, put down the luggage, and clear enough space for his child to sit down. Then he would turn and call out loudly, “Son, come sit here,” followed by another reminder, “Son, did you bring your bread?”

Every time this happened, I always felt disappointed for the driver. He might have thought that this was a 20 yuan fare.

After the father had settled his son, he would squeeze through to the door once more and declare to the driver, “This is the money for my son’s ticket. He paid already, remember. My son is the one with the cap. Don’t forget, Master.”

“Okay.”

“The one at the back with the cap.”

“Got it.”

“Master, my son is wearing a cap. Don’t forget!”

“I know, I know!”

He was still worried, so he shouted into the pool of heads inside the coach, “Son, why don’t you jump up and let the Master see your cap?”

Unfortunately, at that precise moment, everyone was either busy getting on or off, and they were all frantically arranging their luggage. The boy tried to jump up several times, but we still had no chance of seeing his head.

“Okay, okay. No need to jump.”

“Master, my son paid already, and he is the one wearing the cap –”

“I’m about to set off. Those not leaving with us, hurry up and get off.”

“Son, I told you to show the Master your cap. Why don’t you listen?”

Then off we went again, the coach winding down the road from village to village, with passengers waiting by the roadside almost at every one of them. Some of them were taking the coach, but some just wanted to send a message, “Abudula from the fourth Brigade needs to go to the county town tomorrow. Could you pick him up along the way? His house is the second one from the east.”

Or, “Give Pahan this message: buy some celery if there is any money left. Tell him to come home as soon as he can.”

Or, “My Mom is sick. Could you get some medicine for her from the county town?”

Often there were several letters waiting to be picked up by the driver.

Although the coach was very crowded, there was a kind of order within. The first few rows were dedicated to the elderly, while the young people sat on the luggage that was heaped in the aisle. All the children sat on top of the engine cover, which was coated with a thick carpet, and leaned against each other. They might not have known one another, but the older children had the responsibility of looking out for the younger ones, even though the older ones could be just six or seven years old. I saw one of them pushing up the luggage for a three-year-old seated next to him, so that the younger one could sit firmly in his spot. Over and over, whenever the little boy took off his gloves, the older boy would pick them up and put them on him again.

There was a two year-old boy with rosy cheeks sitting across from me, staring at me quietly with his big blue eyes. For two to three hours he kept the same exact position, not moving at all, let alone crying or fussing about.

I said loudly, “Whose kid is this?”

No one answered. Only snores could be heard inside the vehicle.

I asked the boy, “Who is your daddy?”

He continued to look at me with his big blue eyes, not even blinking.

I wanted to touch his hand to see if he was cold, but as soon as I reached out, he quickly extended his arms and wanted me to hold him. A tender feeling enveloped me as he came over. He fell asleep as soon as he was comfortable, with his small, soft body leaning on my arms, his little head tilted to one side. I dared not move for the rest of the journey, afraid of disturbing the lonesome dream of the little person in my arms.

 

~

 

粉红色大车

李娟

(2007-04-13 15:24:40)

 

 

自从有了粉红色大车,我们去县城就再也不坐小面包车了。小面包车一个人要收二十块钱,粉红色大车只要十块钱。小车捎点大件东西还要另外收钱,大车随便装。最重要的是,大车发车总算有个准时了,不像小车,人满了才走,老担误事。

 

“粉红色大车”其实是一辆半旧的中巴车,司机胖乎乎、乐呵呵的,每当看到远处雪地上有人深一脚浅一脚地向公路跑来,就会快乐地踩一脚刹车:“哈呵!十块钱来了!”

 

车上所有的孩子则齐致地发出“嘟儿~~~”——勒马的命令声。

 

我和六十块钱挤在引擎和前排座之间那块地方,已经满满当当了。可是车到温都哈拉村,又塞进来了五十块钱和两只羊,这回挤得连胳膊都抽不出来了,真想让人骑到那两只羊身上去……好在人一多,没有暖气的车厢便暖和起来了。于后排座上的几个男人开始喝酒,快乐地碰杯啊,唱歌啊。一个小时后开始打架。司机便把他们统统哄了下去。这才轻松了不少。

 

 

虽然乌河这一带村庄稀廖,但每天搭粉红色大车去县城或者恰库儿特镇的人还真不少。每天早上不到五点钟车就出发了,孤独地穿过一个又一个漆黑的村庄,一路鸣着喇叭,催亮沿途一盏一盏的窗灯。当喇叭声还响在上面一个村子时,下面村子的人就开始准备了,穿得厚厚的站在大雪簇拥的公路旁,行李堆在脚边雪地上。

 

阿克哈拉是这一带最靠西边的村子,因此粉红色大车每天上路后总是第一个路过这里。我也总是第一个上车。车厢里空荡而冰冷,呵气浓重。司机在引擎的轰鸣声中大声打着招呼:“你好吗?身体可好?”一边从助手座上捞起一件沉重的羊皮坎肩扔给我,我连忙接住盖在膝盖上。

 

夜色深厚,风雪重重,戈壁滩坦阔浩荡,沿途没有一棵树。真不知司机是怎么辨别道路的,永远不会把汽车从积雪覆盖的路面开到同样是积雪覆盖的地基下面去。

 

天色渐渐亮起来时,车厢里已经坐满了人,但还是那么冷。长时间呆在零下二三十度的空气里,我已经冻得实在是受不了。突然看到第一排座位和座位前的引擎盖子上面对面地坐着两个胖胖的老人——那里一定很暖和!便不顾一切地挤过去,硬塞在他们两人中间的空隙里,这下子果然舒服多了。但是,不久后却尴尬地发现:他们两个原来是夫妻……

 

这两口子一路上一直互相握着手,但那两只握在一起的手没地方放,就搁在我的膝盖上……我的手也没地方放,就放在老头儿的腿上。后来老头儿的另一只大手就攥着我的手,替我暖着。老太太看到了也连忙替我暖另一只手。一路上我把手缩回去好几次,但立刻又给攥着了。也不知为什么,我的手总是那么凉……

 

车上的人越来越多,不停地有人上车下车。但大都是搭便车的――正顶着风雪从一个村子步行到另一个村子去,恰好遇到粉红色大车经过,就招手拦下。其实,就算是不拦,车到了人跟前也会停住,车门边坐的人拉开门大声招呼:“要坐车吗?快一点!”

 

周日坐车的人最多,大多是下游一个汉族村里返校上课的汉族孩子。一个个背着书包等在村口,车停下后,父亲先挤上车,左右突围,置好行李,拾掇出能坐下去的地方,然后回头大声招呼:“娃!这呐坐定!”又吼叫着叮嘱一句:“娃!带馍没有?”

每每这时,总会替司机失望一回。还以为这回上来的是二十块钱呢……

 

那父亲安顿好了孩子,挤回车门口,冲司机大喊:“这是俺娃哩车票钱,俺娃给过钱哩!俺娃戴了帽子,师傅别忘哩!”

 

“好。”

 

“就是最后边戴帽子那哩!”

 

“知道了。”

 

“师傅,俺娃戴着帽子,可记着哩!”

 

“知道了知道了!”

 

还不放心,又回头冲车厢里一片乱纷纷的脑袋大吼:“娃,你跳起来,让师傅看看你哩帽子!”

 

无奈此时大家都忙着上下车,手忙脚乱地整理行李,那孩子试着跳了几次,也没法让我们看到他的脑袋。

 

“好啦好啦,不用跳了……”

 

“师傅,俺娃是戴帽子哩,俺娃车钱给过哩……”

 

“要开车了,不走的就赶快下去!”

 

“娃,叫你把帽子给师傅看看,你咋不听?!”

 

“……”

 

 

车在一个又一个村子里蜿蜒着,几乎每一个路口都有人在等待。有的是坐车,有的则为了嘱咐一句:“明天四队的哈布都拉要去县城,路过时别忘了拉上他。他家房子在河边东面第二家。”

 

或者是:“给帕罕捎个口信,还有钱剩下的话就买些芹菜吧。另外让他早点回家。”

 

或者:“我妈妈病了,帮忙在县城买点药吧?”

 

或者有几封信拜托司机寄走。

 

车厢里虽然拥挤但秩序井然。老人们坐在前面几排,年轻人坐在过道里的行李堆上。而小孩子们全都一个靠一个挤在引擎盖子上――那里铺着厚厚的毡毯。虽然孩子们彼此间谁也不认识,可是年龄大的往往有照顾大家的义务。哪怕那个年龄大的也不过只有六七岁而已。他一路上不停地把身边一个三岁小孩背后的行李努力往上堆,好让那孩子坐得稳稳当当。每当哪个小孩把手套脱了扔掉,他都会不厌其烦地拾回来帮他重戴上。

 

还有一个两岁的小孩一直坐在我对面,绯红的脸蛋,蔚蓝色的大眼睛,静静地瞅着我。一连坐了两三个小时都保持着同一个姿势,动都不动一下,更别提哭闹了。

 

我大声说:“谁的孩子?”

 

没人回答。车厢里一片鼾声。

 

我又问那孩子:“爸爸是谁呢?”

 

他的蓝眼睛一眨都不眨地望着我。

 

我想摸摸他的手凉不凉,谁知刚伸出手,他便连忙展开双臂向我倾身过来,要让我抱。真让人心疼……这孩子身子小小软软的,刚一抱在怀里,小脑袋一歪,就靠着我的膊弯睡着了。一路上我动都不敢动弹一下,生怕惊忧了怀中小人安静而孤独的梦境。

 

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Wang Mengqiao -《断裂的杠杆》(a translation of ‘The Broken Pole’ by David Perry)

Wang Mengqiao (pen name: 木冬) is a graduate student from Nanyang Technological University, studying translation. She has developed a great interest in poetry during her course of study, and has begun to write and translate poems.

 

断裂的杠杆

大卫・佩里

经年的老方法滑出全新的角度,把空气抛下

在我们如蚁般滑行的砂砾中

银行大厅在机尾逐渐抽象(那上海航空)

柏油跑道上的唾液正在蒸发

荧幕上,女侍应生上菜

表达爱意的便条;丑陋的抽象;搭便车的人

一遍遍扯下车门;修理工

把密封剂倒在行人身上;皇权

被陶瓷上的橙釉铭记

陶匠的女儿纵入火焰

火焰燃烧于引擎

引擎带我们穿越时空,我们遇到了那口钟

钟匠的女儿纵入火焰

成就了钟

成就了父与子

女儿在引擎中高歌

The Broken Pole

 

Age-old methods gull new angles, dropping air

under which we slip like ants in sand

bank lobby abstract at the back of the plane (Shanghai Air)

spit on the tarmac receding

And on the screen the waitress dishes

mash notes, the abstract’s defaced, hitchhikers

rip the car door off again and again, a maintenance man

flips sealant onto passersby and imperial power

is instantiated in orange glazed vessels

the potter’s daughter throws herself in the fire

fire burns in the engines

the engines pass us through air as we learn of the bell

the bellmaker’s daughter throws herself in the fire

the bell thereby successfully forged

father and son saved

daughter singing in the engines

 

– David Perry

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Fiction

Choo Yi Feng – ‘Brightest Day’

Choo Yi Feng is currently an undergraduate majoring in life sciences at the National University of Singapore. He has previously been published in Curios, the annual student journal of Tembusu College at NUS. He also a volunteer who gives tour guides and conducts intertidal surveys on Singapore’s diverse seashores. 

 

Brightest Day

 

In the dawn before the sun had fully risen, my bedroom was flushed in a deep blue light that promised to stain everything it touched forever with its saturated tint. My eyes opened, and it was as if my body was instantly filled with an electric vitality, my heart pounding from either the thrill of a forgotten dream or the anticipation of a good day. I eased out of bed and poured myself a cup of water. There was none of the usual grogginess and heavy lids, and even the usual stuffy nose was gone too. It was as if I had closed my eyes last night, counted to three, and simply opened my eyes to welcome the new day.

 

Inside the stale auditorium I was seated somewhere in the middle rows, finishing the remains of my bread. The lecturer entered with a tote bag slung on his shoulder. From it he drew out a thick stack of papers. His assistant divided them into even piles and laid them out on the table, and he instructed us through the mike to come down and collect our scripts. I did decently, but didn’t score as highly as expected. There was a particularly thorny question right at the beginning that tested Euler’s formula, which I didn’t understand very well. It had thrown off my momentum for the rest of the paper. At the end of the period, as I was sliding the swivel table back into place, I felt a sharp graze on my arm and swore in a low whisper. The auditorium was quite old, and the table had a crack in it. A sharp, jutting edge had carved a thin line, which quickly began to bleed.

 

The next few hours passed in a slow blur. I cleaned the wound. It stung for a while, but the blood cleared fast, leaving only a pale stroke. I was aware of a lot of walking, of one crowded venue growing in volume as it approached, until I was fully immersed in the ripe hustle and din of activity, and then fading with relief and growing quiet as I left. Then I would enter another space and the cycle would repeat itself, over and over. I tried to look for people, but I couldn’t find any. There were plenty of students and a smattering of staff, but if they were queuing at a stall for food, then that was all that mattered. They only existed to me in that very confined space for those short moments. I found it difficult to think of them as people rather than just elements of physical geography.

 

Someone was studying at the table next to me as I ate lunch in the canteen. I threw one or two glances at him because I felt like I had seen his face somewhere, but when he looked up I averted my eyes. Last week – I think it was a Tuesday – another person had also been studying at a table next to me as I ate. I finished my lunch and joined the short queue of people carrying empty bowls and plates to the return point. Later in the day I had a vague idea of failing to understand the cause of centripetal acceleration along a wave element. I leaned back and became conscious of a cold, mild ache in my legs.

 

Outside this lecture theatre there were booths set up – a makeshift basketball arcade game crafted inventively from basic materials. Young people in matching t-shirts were stopping passers-by to talk to them, and passers-by were listening to nothing in particular, deflecting away as though repulsed by an invisible current. There was a display of eco-conscious things, of pens and stickers, but also of folders, pouches, cases, cloth bags – things designed ostentatiously to hold other things. I lingered there, as I enjoyed looking at these things. Inevitably, one of the young people started sharing their ideas with me, about a project involving a neighbouring, poorer country, and rebuilding homes for displaced people and animals.

 

The difference that I noticed, which she later also explained, was that they were using a novel approach – reconstituting the natural habitat by first reconstructing the human environment, which sounded familiar to me but also very new – almost ground-breaking. I offered her my well wishes. As I approached the bus stop I heard someone speaking loudly. He was a middle-aged man dressed in loose clothes, and he walked with a pronounced limp. I couldn’t hear what he was saying but he kept repeating it, sometimes at a random stranger but mostly into thin air.

 

I was basically alone in the chill upper deck of the nearly-empty bus as it crawled along its route. At one stop, the sound of someone clambering up the stairs could be heard, growing louder with every step. She approached and fell into the seat next to me with such weight that I bounced slightly. She wore a black hoodie, and her eyes were framed by messy, dark purple bangs tinged with orange. Her eyes bore into me as I took in the sight of her. Someone in the lower deck pressed the bell for the bus to stop. The girl said nothing, and I said nothing, and afterwards I turned my attention back to my phone for the remainder of the ride. She stayed where she was. Her heavy, laborious breathing grated on me.

 

In my room I tried to sift through the tasks of the day, but the golden glow of the late afternoon cast sharp, oblique shadows that distracted me, splayed across the furniture in whimsical postures. I only tended to get any work done after the sky had darkened, but then it would almost be dinner time. I took my Lexapro and gazed out of the window instead. The heat of the afternoon was quietly receding, and there was a mild breeze stirring. I felt like going for a walk. Mommy would not be home for at least another half-hour.

 

The girl from the bus was at the void deck, seated at the green metal table with her feet propped up. She looked at me, and then turned her attention back to her cigarette, saying nothing. I walked cautiously towards the table but did not sit down. She puffed up her cheeks and blew a smoke ring. It pulsed in my direction and dissipated, leaving the sharp odour of tobacco. A pair of cats were meowling aggressively some distance away, perhaps in the next block.

 

“Look, I don’t really want to be here either, but it felt like it was necessary to at least make you aware of this. If you’re just going to stand there and show me that ugly pout then give me the word and I’ll go.”

 

I took a deep breath and slid into the chair opposite her, chewing my lower lip. We sat in silence for a while more, the lighted tip of her cigarette flaring up with every breath she sucked through it. Her hair was really quite mesmerising. It was a rich, deep purple, but when she brushed her hands through it, there were unmistakable patches of bleached orange that almost glimmered. We stayed silent together for a while and watched as the daylight faded further.

 

“You used to write letters to me. Remember?”

 

I groaned involuntarily, burying my face in my palm as the goose-bumps rose on my neck.

 

“Oh don’t act so coy. It happens.” She stubbed out her cigarette against the table and flicked it aside, shifting her feet off the chair so that she could turn towards me.

 

“I need to go back to that day. Jog the memory. What happened?”

 

I leaned my chin against my hand and stared at the space around her, trying to recall. Now I really was pouting.

 

“I stapled a whole bunch of recycled paper together and started scribbling down everything on my mind. About why I was doing this and how I felt and what my intention was, and who I was sorry to and what would happen to the things in my bedroom.”

 

She made an attempt at a sincere smile that came across as a smirk instead.

 

“Because it felt like the worst day of my life and it felt like I wasn’t going to make it through, and I thought I should write a letter and that way I could either feel better after that, or if I didn’t it wouldn’t be a total waste.”

 

“On your way home. You had your report book in your hand because it wouldn’t fit in the bag. Just after the overhead bridge. Was the neighbourhood quiet that day?”

 

“I – I can’t remember.”

 

“Did you remember somebody dropping a bunch of coins?”

 

“Yes. I… think so.”

 

“And you stopped to help him pick them up.”

 

“Oh yeah. Okay, I remember that.”

 

She stayed quiet for a while. I felt like asking her now. She got up and turned towards the small field next to the flat.

 

“Come with me. We’ll go somewhere. Field trip.”

 

I stayed in my seat, fingers curling weakly. She turned back around at me.

 

“Come on. You’ll like it.”

 

We travelled there by bus. We sat in the upper deck. Again it was basically empty. I sat on the inner seat, the one closer to the window. She sat next to me, closer to the aisle, and when she took her place again it was with a force that caused me to bounce a little in my seat. She was heavily built, and I could feel her weight pressing against me at every sharp turn. The streets were so quiet that we skipped many stops. Eventually we got off on a secluded road that I didn’t recognise.

 

She opened the gate and I walked through it. The guard at the post didn’t notice us and he looked monumentally stoic. The prison compound was almost empty. We passed through gantries and steel doors that I didn’t even know how to operate. Every handle opened magically under her hand, and every door without a clear mechanism seemed to give way at her touch. We passed through a warren of passages, making turns to the left and right, taking elevators, climbing staircases.

 

At last we were in a sparse, tight room with silver panels lining the walls and a couple of surgical beds in the middle. It was unnaturally cold, and I was reminded of my lecture theatre. We stood against the sides of the room. I felt the cool concrete of the wall, and heard the silent whirring of the vents. In the stillness, again I felt like asking her, but she spoke first.

 

“That person whose coins you helped pick up. Let’s call him Jared for simplicity. In a sense, you could say that he was your neighbour, even though he lived in the rental flat two blocks down from your own. I’m not usually in the business of judging, but somebody like you would say that he was an actual waste of a life.”

 

She took out an iPad from her bag and scrolled through it. I was facing her and couldn’t see what was on the screen.

 

“He did some pretty fucked up things, by your standards. Stole money from his mom’s medicine fund to fuel his addiction. At an earlier point he had twice tried to get away with not paying prostitutes, and later raped them. But that part isn’t on his criminal record. The thing that did the job was just the packet of heroin found in his jeans, on the day that you nearly jumped.” She looked up at me.

 

I opened my mouth wanting to say something then closed it again, thinking. Finally I just said, “That was seven years ago. And I’m guessing it was today.”

“Clever kid. It’s unfortunate, because he was running the drugs to buy more medicine for his mother but, well, guess he was already in too deep.”

 

“Is he…dead?”

 

“Yeah, they hanged him three days ago. His wife came to collect his body afterwards. There’s no funeral because she doesn’t have any money.”

 

I tried to recall if I had ever seen a funeral at the bottom of the rental flats. There were weddings, which were usually glimmering, riotous affairs, but no funerals.

 

“That’s the whole lot of them. His mother was cremated just two months before that, too, from neurodegeneration – genetic, but those years of heroin didn’t help either. The father…he’s somewhere in my archives, long gone. His only living relative is the uncle in prison – for sexual abuse – but he’s due soon, too. His sentence is going to outlast that cancer-ridden body. No funerals for any of them, just straight into the chute. Well, at least that makes things easier for me.”

 

“If he’s already gone, why are you only telling me now?”

 

She gave me a certain kind of a look, brows furrowed. “What, did you want to watch the hanging?”

 

“No!”

 

“Then?”

 

“I – I don’t know, I could at least see him, see what he looked like before they hanged him.”

 

Her eyes bore into my and she smirked again. This time it was the kind of smirk that would ordinarily have got on my nerves, but now made me wince in fear.

 

See him? What are you talking about? Nobody sees Jared.”

 

“What do you mean?”

 

She stifled a chuckle, a manic look in her eyes as she stared at me, first in silent disbelief, then with an explosive bark of laughter as she threw her head back.

 

“Trust me, nobody in this country wants to see Jared. Nobody thinks about people like Jared, and nobody talks about people like Jared. Your lot do such a good job of turning death row criminals into a series of numbers and things that it makes me look bad. That’s saying something. That’s a big fucking deal.”

 

The idea seemed to amuse her so much that she doubled over, clinging to my shoulder for support. She laughed and laughed and laughed. I looked at her in horror, unsure of what to say. The pumping in my chest was so intense it seemed as if my heart was trying to drown the world in blood.

 

Eventually she laughed herself out. All that remained was a smile. She got up and shook her head, wiping a tear from her eye and sweeping the bangs out of her face.

 

“So that day, and those coins,” I said. “What was that? Was it like, he had to die because I didn’t die in the end?”

 

She stifled another giggle. “Not everything’s about you, you know. Look, it’s so simple. You borrow something and you return it when you’re done. You romantics make it into such a big deal – your masochistic jack-offs, your lurid death cults. Do I care whether you come back to me in a carriage or a sack, in April or December? No. The answer’s no.”

 

I leaned back against the wall and felt my knees buckle. I suddenly felt tired and out of place. I sat on the floor and looked at the bare, white tiles. She was busy with her iPad. She walked over to the silver panels and grabbed the handles, pulling out the long drawers with a tremor of stainless steel. She lifted the blankets, took notes of the faces, and dropped them back before bumping the drawers shut with her hip. Occasionally she made noises of approval or looks of surprise.

 

“You know sometimes, the cord’s too short. You can tell when there’s a gash on the neck. That’s what you might call a botched execution, and you could actually sue for that. Oh, but – not here, of course.”

 

A while later she gave her document a quick appraisal and put the iPad back inside her bag.

 

“Ready to go, kid? My car’s parked nearby so I can give you lift home.”

 

It turned out that she drove a Lamborghini. We cruised over the road without a single bump, and made clean, sharp turns at junctions. I sat next to her in silence, looking out of the window. My hands were shaking a little, and my fingers were curled on my lap in a loose fist. Inside my head, our conversation in the morgue looped over and over. We stopped at a red light at the junction right outside the promenade. We were the only vehicle on the road.

“Sometimes I think about what might have happened if I really had ended up killing myself seven years ago. At lunch, in the middle of an especially boring lecture. I think of all the pain, the guilt, the confusion of the people that I love so, so much. I think of them having to sort through the things in my bedroom, or just leaving the door closed. I think of all the little moments this week when things were actually okay, I guess, and how I would have missed all that. I think that I don’t deserve this. Maybe I have it too good.”

 

She didn’t turn to look at me. She just stared straight ahead at the traffic light, nodding lightly. She had been tapping her finger on the steering wheel but stopped by the time I finished speaking. The light turned green and the car accelerated to a smooth sixty.

 

“Look, all this cause-and-effect stuff is really… I just don’t deal with it. It’s not in my business. I take numbers. I track the inflow and the outflow. Maybe it’s God. Maybe it’s Dharmic karma. Maybe it’s just pure cosmic chaos.” The blinker went on and we flushed into the leftmost lane. “I don’t know if you’d call it good luck or bad. But if you’re thinking that way, maybe the universe dealt you a joker.”

 

“And it’s up to me to decide how to play it?”

 

“Clever kid. No wonder you’re at university.”

 

“I grew up without a father too. But for Jared, that… on top of everything else. It’s almost like he never got a chance to be anything other than a shadow of his parents’ failures. And if they couldn’t even raise him right, I wonder why they tried. I wonder who gave them the right to cause all this suffering.”

 

“It’s a mystery. The world could be burning and they’ll try anyway. Over and over, with their children, and their children’s children. On and on for as long as it’s possible. Many things change, but that doesn’t.” “Waiting for the execution date nearly broke him. Each time the prison officer came to announce the coming month’s numbers, he would think it was him. Days before he would tell his girlfriend his final wishes. They would announce it, and his number wouldn’t be there, and he would have salvaged another month. This happened repeatedly over fourteen months. Even I had to change my projections a few times because his attorney tried to stay the date.”

 

“At least it’s done now.”

 

We drove on until we were back at the bottom of my flat.

 

“Well,  don’t think too much about it. It’ll just fire up your depression again.” She tousled my head. “Don’t talk to lawyers, don’t listen to politicians, and don’t go on Facebook. It’ll pass out of your brain in about a week. I’ll see you whenever, I guess. If it starts hurting when you pee, get yourself checked for cancer. Just in case.”

I managed a weak smile and waved, watching as the bright orange car slipped back into the moonless night and vanished from my view. I stood at the same spot, staring at the space where it should have been. It was all quiet now.

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Scott L. Satterfield – Translation of a Poem from the Complete Anthology of Tang Bohu

From the Complete Anthology of Tang Bohu

(pen name of Tang Yin 唐寅, 6 March 1470 – 4 January 1524)

 

 

半醒半醉日復日

花開花落年復年

但愿老死花酒間

不愿鞠躬車馬前

Half sober, half drunk day after day

Flowers bloom, flowers fall year after year

Yet I’d willingly die among blossoms and booze

than hitched to the front of a horsecart

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DS Maolalaí – three more poems

DS Maolalaí has been nominated for Best of the Web and twice for the Pushcart Prize. His first collection, Love is Breaking Plates in the Garden, was published in 2016 by the Encircle Press, with Sad Havoc Among the Birds forthcoming from Turas Press in 2019.

 

The maintenance office.

 

outside

cigarette ends

stick in rain

like cherry petals. cotton

crushed white

and tempting birds to landing,

while the walls trap smoke

and keep it

like a key

dropped in your pocket.

men stand circles,

huddled for tired fives

and the yard smells of work-boots, sweat,

smoke and wet leather.

 

~

 

Kilbarrack to Tara: 8:45

 

I like it; going into town

on the train occasionally

like a man with a purpose,

a mind and a serious job. the track is suspended

for a good view of rooftops – they display

far more character

than the bits you see

every day. I am neither the least

nor the most romantic of men – I don’t imagine

that looking down

at houses like this

matters more

than any other direction.

but what? is it not still more beautiful

to see the leaves only, instead of the whole treetrunk? or see

where someone has installed a skylight

and angle a look

inside? and doesn’t your eye light up too,

and focus on the first spark that shines

when you’re trying your best

to get a fire going?

 

~

 

How are you

 

Lucy tells me

she doesn’t like

babbling. doesn’t like

the “how are you”

you have to ask

of a check-out lady

before you buy

your painkillers

or your pot of salt,

your bottle
of table wine. me,

I don’t mind it. like

getting a car into gear. gives me a second

to get my questions ready. I am not

a written character

designed for dialogue,

snapping out meaning

like a flag in the wind. I am a person

and so are you

and that

is all

the “how are you” thing

means. “I am a person

and so

are you. we both

are people

and we understand each other.

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DS Maolalaí – three poems

DS Maolalaí has been nominated for Best of the Web and twice for the Pushcart Prize. His first collection, Love is Breaking Plates in the Garden, was published in 2016 by the Encircle Press, with Sad Havoc Among the Birds forthcoming from Turas Press in 2019.

 

Vineyards.

 

grapes grow best

on bad ground

in good weather

where they have to take nutrition

straight

out of sunlight. fruit

swells, falls sometimes

on rocks. gets stamped in sheds

and rotten

to deliciousness. the black scars of broken trees

sown in lines

and hot dust – like a man

with thinning hair

who thinks it looks best

when it’s combed

while soaking.

 

~

 

The clay.

 

and down the river

an old car had collapsed itself,

in red rust

like lasagna burned

just right.

we never learned

how it got there – perhaps

someone had died

in a crash –

but were forbidden

from playing in it

anyway – rust

and the danger

of tetanus

too great in our mother’s

eyes. we went near though,

all the same,

and the clay

of the riverbank was perfect. wet cement

which solidified

easily

in our childish attempts

at art. one year

some swallows

build a next in the headlamp,

protected by running water

and the slow breaking

of steel.

we were told again

to stay away,

and this time

we did.

the next year

there were more birds

than grass-stems.

 

~

 

The fern.

 

these are days;

people

with nothing to do

doing

nothing. people

with things

to do

doing

those things. the sun

out, loud and shining,

like a child

screaming at a dropped ice-cream, but weak enough

to freeze you

in a shadow. people sometimes

in houses

touching their hands

against the clock. staring at computers.

or older, looking at ferns

which die on the windowledge. what life

is in a dying fern? a metaphor

for the rest of us? or perhaps

the last leaf

is just a marker

for when once you tidied

up.

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Karolina Pawlik – ‘Czułomność’

Karolina Pawlik is a Shanghai-based researcher, lecturer and writer of mixed Polish and Russian origins. Trained in anthropology, she is mostly interested in visual culture, especially typography evolving in Shanghai since the Republican era. Some of her poems in Polish have been published in Poland. “Migraintion” is the first poetry series she has written in English. 

 

Czułomność

 

*
jazz seeping through
a cracked-heart lattice
belated tenderness – unframed

 

*
tele-gram czułości
“your smile
loosens singularity”

*
gdzie jesteś
na krawędzi ciebie
nowej obecności

*
zwinięci w znak zapytania
nasłuchujemy poskrzypywania
mechanizm przeznaczenia

*
pomiędzy nami
nic lub nić
lub noc niczyja

*
double happiness
creates a labyrinth
of pulsing walls

*
mącone odbicia
samotności
moja twoją

*
gałązką lipy
zasunięta noc
z Madonną
w podwórzu

*
ty ja – dziurki dwie
w materii świata
szylkretowym guziku

*
last metro cuts the city
osmanthus resin
captures our steps

*
mysz drąży ciemność
kryjówkę dla słów
których się lękamy

*
tam brwi łączą się
w linię – przerywaną
jak oddech

*
tu zimą światło
nabiera ciężaru
w Tobie usypia

*
księżyc znów cały
dla mnie – domykam się
po rozstaniu

*
汤圆 – like our kisses
in distant winter
unforeseen common future

 

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Nazarii A. Nazarov – “Hikayat”

Nazarii A. Nazarov holds a PhD in linguistics, and lives and works in Kyiv, Ukraine. His poems have appeared in national anthologies in Ukraine (both in Ukrainian and in French translation). Previously published collections include Escape from Babylon (2006), Torch Bearer (2009), and translation collections Gardens of Adonis: Minor Anthology of World Poetry (2015, translations from Modern and Ancient Greek, Persian etc.), and Cavafy: Poems (2016, from Modern Greek).

 

Hikayat

 

The following poems are based on the mythologized biography of Alexander the Great, whose story was retold all over the Eurasia. The hero’s name, as well as the content, was constantly changing from one version to another. After his death, Alexander kept on traveling – but now only as a name, as a sound, as wind… So, in the following lines, Asian images are mingled with European.

 

I

And then came Rum

we offered them

jade and jasper

and oil to wash

their bodies of alabaster

they as the conquerors should do

took everything

with silent gestures

of acceptance

and watered their

horses mules and elephants

with the sacred water

of the Ganga

where the lust of our ancestors

was mingled

with disaster

 

II

Raja Iskander

sitting on his white elephant

gave a wink to our

astonished throng

we threw flowers

at his cortege

while a harpsichord was playing

behind the screen

of dalang

 

 

Notes

Hikayat – a Malaysian epic genre

Rum – i.e. “the Greeks”

Raja Iskander – the form in which Alexander’s name was used in Arabic and other Asian sources

 

 

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Sonnet Mondal – “Journeying”

Sonnet Mondal writes from Kolkata. His most recent poetry collections include Karmic Chanting (Copper Coin 2018) and Ink and Line (Dhauli Books 2018). He has read at literary festivals in Macedonia, Ireland, Turkey, Nicaragua, Sri Lanka, Germany, Hungary, and Slovakia. His writing has appeared in publications across Europe, North America, Asia, and Australia. Mondal was one of the authors of the “Silk Routes” project of the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa from 2014 to 2016. Director of the Chair Poetry Evenings International Festival, Mondal edits the Indian section of Lyrikline (Haus für Poesie, Berlin) and serves as editor in chief of the Enchanting Verses Literary Review. He has been a guest editor for Poetry at Sangam, India, and Words Without Borders, New York. 

 

Journeying

 

by and by             life would pass like this

flying                   like a vagrant kite at night

 

earlier                   i used to tour inside my mind

sometimes            with my mind into others

 

then i thought       my body should also tour

hence i tour          with both of them now

 

when                     my bones would start forsaking me

i would still tour   inside my mind

 

and count              my days of travel

looking at             the curve of my shadow

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