Mascara Literary Review

Issue Seven May 2010

Eileen Chong

 

Eileen Chong is a Singapore-born, Sydney-based writer and photographer. An essay of hers was published in Hecate in 2008. Her poetry has appeared in the first issue of Meanjin this year. Her Polaroid photography has been featured in D2, a Norwegian arts magazine. She lives with her husband and two moggy cats.

 

 

 

 

What a poem is

A poem is a heavy thing. It weighs

as you scrub the potatoes,

rub them with salt, then decide

to boil them instead. A poem

is a heavy thing. You carry its strain

as you lay plates on the table, as you set

out cutlery. A poem is

a heavy thing. Even the brownness

of the chicken’s skin reminds you

of your grandfather’s hands

in the dirt. Of his feet on the deck

when he caught the fish. A poem is a heavy

thing. You’d wanted greens

but instead bought beansprouts, pale

with their arching necks, tails intact

because you couldn’t bear the smell

of your grandmother’s hours

at the sink: plucking, washing, plucking.

A poem is a heavy thing.

When your husband comes

home from work, you think

man, labour, dust, evensong

as he kisses you and asks

how your day was. Heavy,

you tell him. Heavy.

 

 

 

Blue Velvet

 

I bought her those shoes. I was the only one

who ever bought her shoes. I knew her

size. I knew what she liked. She’d always

picked on me, but I was the only one

who ever bought her shoes

in her size that she liked.

 

She had told her oldest son

that when death called

for her, she wanted to be wearing

those shoes. He said

they were house slippers, too flimsy

for her walk in the other world.

 

Yet in the end, afraid, he gave me

the shoes – hand-embroidered

with phoenixes decked out

in sequins, gold thread, green

beads for eyes – I sheathed

the old lady’s cold, rigid feet.

 

Thank god I had bought them

in blue, not red. She would not

have been allowed to been buried

in anything red. Not unless we wanted her

to come back from the dead, shuffling

in those slippers, going to the courtyard

to beat the night’s blankets

in the dawning sun.

 

 

 

Summer in London

 

Summer in London is not

to be experienced without

a raincoat and an umbrella.

London cabs are big and black

but their drivers are not. The British Museum

is a collection of loot. The pubs

are the same as English pubs everywhere. The food

is awful. The train stations are beautiful

with their skeletons of efficiency

and clockwork hearts. Trains coming

and leaving like lovers, disgorging passengers

like bile. The Underground is exciting, but only

in name. The warrens smell

of pee. The streets have the same names

as the streets in Singapore, in Australia.

We’ve all dreamt

of Piccadilly Circus. Mine is complete

with horse-cabs, bobbies and whips. It turns out to be

just a rather large roundabout. The hotel

is not grandiose. The bed

has broken springs. At night I turn to you

but, your back hurting, you face

away. I close my eyes

but London calls. My London

with its clocks and castles and

the will-o-the-wisp shimmering

over the moonlit moors.