From Cardiff to a Hot Country

These poems were written by our slave/intern, Renyi Lim, who has just finished her three-year BA in English Literature at Cardiff University. While studying in Wales, she furthered her interest in Creative Writing, experimenting with Microfiction and Poetry.

We love our little Renyi/slave/intern and are very proud of her!

As she comes home from work

5:45pm – on the Piccadilly line, she hides
behind a day-old slice of the Metro,
lets fall
her city coat, grey and impersonal as concrete;
the starched Egyptian cotton shirt,
beaten free of sunlight;
the sober charcoal of her skirt –
Italian wool – stapled to her paper doll frame,
stockings of last-gasp cigarette smoke
drifting around her feet.
She stands in her chemise,
a scrap of cloud snagged on a skyscraper
bare in the carriage.
Between sudoku and crosswords
no one notices
this striptease
to the strains of Schubert and The Strokes
bleeding from anonymous ears.

Ghosts

At dawn, I heard two sounds
I would never hear again. First, the sonorous bark
of a dog that died in April

woke me. And then, I swear
your sleep-soaked murmur buried itself
in my spine, the way it would when I stole

your share of the blankets. Repentant,
I turned to cast it over
unslept-in sheets and vacant air.


Postcard from a Hot Country


Away from you, I have lost count of the days.
I know I write this in a summer month, with news
from a land you never used to think of.

There are lizards in my bathroom again, the roads
swarm with bad drivers, and the heat is heavy,
a duvet refusing to lift until evening turns my skin

golden against the sky’s deep blue.
I fall back in love with my city at this hour,
And so, I think, would you, if you learnt how luck

is a golden oriole swooping past the window,
or if you smelt promise in the first blooms
of a Rangoon Creeper. The rain’s soft hiss

on outstretched jungle leaves will make you cry
in your dreams. If you ever visit, I’ll teach you
to eat dumplings with eighteen petal folds,

to bite it with care so the soup does not spill out
and scald your lips – fierce as the kiss
pressed to this sixty-sen postcard.

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2 Comments

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  1. Sharon Nelson 03. Sep, 2009 at 12:39 am #

    I know it’s a bit chest-thumping to comment on one’s own website, but I really like your stuff. It reminds me of Eliot, whom I think is an eternal genius.

  2. John Freeman 06. Sep, 2009 at 10:47 pm #

    It is wonderful to see these brilliant poems online. Congratulations to Renyi and to you for her having her with you!

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