Saturday, April 21, 2007

LAST WINTER

It was a little too early in the morning to walk to the train station
the air still wet
the pavement reeked of pot

A homeless man overtook my lazy stroll
I reached into my pocket: no quarter for you my man,
or your empty beer can

A pile of paper on ohms, impedance,
and the immortal flow of energy:
forget the discounted airfares on the shop windows
there will be no more love in the tropics
this winter!

And I thought about the Ancar river, yours,
its own immortal flow
and the unavoidable
arguments in the kitchen
the shifting of sand and water

Under the red awning of Waroeng Java
8.30 a.m.
"1 pesan diterima"
"you're not going home this year?"

Do you think it's ever appropriate
to thumbclick a reply
for a woman
who has given away nine months
of her womb?

I looked at Meneer Deventer across the road
his centuries of stiffness
crumpled my train ticket into a ball
and made a beeline for the postkantoor:
"Dear my island home,
you little dot on a globe,
I still hold you responsible for me, and my hopes."

- Ida Ayu Oka Suwati Sideman, 'Winter Terakhir', from Perempuan Bali di Rantau

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

COLD UNREGISTERED

Cold unregistered
on the thermometer

The city only wet

The wind along the river
drives us away, yet we stay

there. As though

the drizzle vanishes
and the light swims

playing with colour

God, why can we be
happy?

- Jennifer Lindsay's version of Goenawan Mohamad's 'Dingin Tak Tercatat', pilfered from Linus Suryadi AG, Di Balik Sejumlah Nama, p. 212.

COLD UNREGISTERED

Cold unregistered
on the thermometer

City wet

The wind along the river
driving us away, yet we stay

rain invisible
and the light swimming

playing with colour

God, how can we ever
be happy?

- Harry Aveling's version, also from Linus's book, pp. 211-212.

Cold Unregistered

Cold unregistered
on the thermometer

The city is but wet

Along the river the wind
chases us away, but we stay

there. As if

the light were swiming
in rain unseen,

playing with colors.

God, why can we be this
happy?

- Laksmi Pamuntjak's version in Goenawan Mohamad, Selected Poems, p. 33.