Doãn Quốc Sỹ’s Reed Forest | Mai Thảo

Doãn Quốc Sỹ [1923-2025, sketch by Đinh Trường Chinh

A poem in Vietnamese by Mai Thảo
Translator: Nguyễn Thị Phương Trâm

a whole day bus trip
through Doãn Quốc Sỹ Reed Forest
September on fire
Immortal American Autumn and June Gloom
posthumous blood stained bough and red leaves
pointy rocks meditating
defiant amid nature
the thought of you once upon a time

a whole night bus trip
amid Doãn Quốc Sỹ Reed Forest
ancient rain
a meadow lit up by fire flies
flashing lighting and exploding memories
ceasing
remain is the trickling of a small stream in the silence
and your laughter is clear as day
the year you came to see me

the bus slipping rapidly down a slope
thicker and thicker is the fog
not a sound of the trickling of the small stream
and that was the end of Doãn Quốc Sỹ Reed Forest

rừng Doãn Quốc Sỹ

Bus chạy suốt một ngày
Qua rừng Doãn Quốc Sỹ
Tháng chín cháy
Thu Hoa Kỳ bất hủ ở Sầu Mây
Lá đỏ thắm cành di cảo máu
Tảng đá nhọn ngồi thiền
Bằn bặt giữa thiên nhiên
Trầm tưởng người năm ấy

Bus chạy suốt một đêm
Giữa rừng Doãn Quốc Sỹ
Mưa bạt ngàn
Đồi sáng rỡ lân tinh
Sấp chớp nổ tung vùng trí nhớ
Ngưng
Trong yên tĩnh chỉ còn dòng suối nhỏ
Trong vắt tiếng cười người
Năm ấy đã qua đây

Bus vùn vụt đổ dốc
Sương mịt mùng khuất lấp
Tiếng suối chẳng còn nghe
Hết rừng Doãn Quốc Sỹ


Mai Thảo [1927-1998] real name is Nguyen Dang Quy, another pen name: Nguyen Dang, he was born on June 8, 1927 in Con market, Quan Phuong Ha commune, Hai Hau district, Nam Dinh province (originally from Tho Khoi village, Gia Lam district, Bac Ninh province, the same hometown and related to the painter Le Thi Luu), his father was a merchant and wealthy landowner. Mai Thao absorbed his mother’s love of literature from Bac Ninh. As a child, he studied at a village school, went to Nam Dinh high school and then Hanoi (studied at Do Huu Vi school, later Chu Van An). In 1945, he followed the school to Hung Yen. When the war broke out in 1946, the family evacuated from Hanoi to Con market, in the “House of the Salt Water Region”, from then on Mai Thao left home to Thanh Hoa to join the resistance, wrote for newspapers, participated in art troupes traveling everywhere from Lien Khu Ba, Lien Khu Tu to the Viet Bac resistance zone. This period left a deep mark on his literature. In 1951, Mai Thao abandoned the resistance and went into the city to do business. In 1954, he migrated to the South. He wrote short stories for the newspapers Dan Chu, Lua Viet, and Nguoi Viet. He was the editor-in-chief of the newspapers Sang Tao (1956), Nghe Thuat (1965), and from 1974, he oversaw the Van newspaper. He participated in the literature and art programs of radio stations in Saigon from 1960 to 1975. On December 4, 1977, Mai Thao crossed the sea. After 7 days and nights at sea, the boat arrived at Pulau Besar, Malaysia. In early 1978, he was sponsored by his brother to go to the United States. Shortly after, he collaborated with Thanh Nam’s Dat Moi newspaper and several other overseas newspapers. In July 1982, he republished the Van magazine, and was editor-in-chief until 1996, when due to health problems, he handed it over to Nguyen Xuan Hoang; Two years later he died in Santa Ana, California on January 10, 1998.

Nguyễn Thị Phương Trâm, the blogger, poet, and translator, was born in 1971 in Phu Nhuan, Saigon, Vietnam. The pharmacist currently lives and works in Western Sydney, Australia.

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By Nguyễn Thị Phương Trâm

There's magic in translating a body of work from one language to another.

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