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	<title>Salt Media &#187; Cardiff University</title>
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	<link>http://saltmedia.com.my</link>
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		<title>From Cardiff to a Hot Country</title>
		<link>http://saltmedia.com.my/2009/09/02/from-cardiff-to-a-hot-country/</link>
		<comments>http://saltmedia.com.my/2009/09/02/from-cardiff-to-a-hot-country/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Sep 2009 02:33:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Rose Ismail</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cardiff University]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Microfiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetry]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://saltmedia.com.my/?p=616</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[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 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>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.</p>
<p>We love our little Renyi/slave/intern and are very proud of her!</p>
<h1>As she comes home from work</h1>
<p>5:45pm – on the Piccadilly line, she hides<br />
behind a day-old slice of the Metro,<br />
lets fall<br />
her city coat, grey and impersonal as concrete;<br />
the starched Egyptian cotton shirt,<br />
beaten free of sunlight;<br />
the sober charcoal of her skirt –<br />
Italian wool – stapled to her paper doll frame,<br />
stockings of last-gasp cigarette smoke<br />
drifting around her feet.<br />
She stands in her chemise,<br />
a scrap of cloud snagged on a skyscraper<br />
bare in the carriage.<br />
Between sudoku and crosswords<br />
no one notices<br />
this striptease<br />
to the strains of Schubert and The Strokes<br />
bleeding from anonymous ears.</p>
<h1>Ghosts</h1>
<p>At dawn, I heard two sounds<br />
I would never hear again. First, the sonorous bark<br />
of a dog that died in April</p>
<p>woke me. And then, I swear<br />
your sleep-soaked murmur buried itself<br />
in my spine, the way it would when I stole</p>
<p>your share of the blankets. Repentant,<br />
I turned to cast it over<br />
unslept-in sheets and vacant air.</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<h1>Postcard from a Hot Country</h1>
<p><strong> </strong><br />
Away from you, I have lost count of the days.<br />
I know I write this in a summer month, with news<br />
from a land you never used to think of.</p>
<p>There are lizards in my bathroom again, the roads<br />
swarm with bad drivers, and the heat is heavy,<br />
a duvet refusing to lift until evening turns my skin</p>
<p>golden against the sky’s deep blue.<br />
I fall back in love with my city at this hour,<br />
And so, I think, would you, if you learnt how luck</p>
<p>is a golden oriole swooping past the window,<br />
or if you smelt promise in the first blooms<br />
of a Rangoon Creeper. The rain’s soft hiss</p>
<p>on outstretched jungle leaves will make you cry<br />
in your dreams. If you ever visit, I’ll teach you<br />
to eat dumplings with eighteen petal folds,</p>
<p>to bite it with care so the soup does not spill out<br />
and scald your lips – fierce as the kiss<br />
pressed to this sixty-sen postcard.
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