new year’s eve | Mai Thảo

2017 Vivid Festival, Sydney Opera House, Australia. Photography: Nguyễn Thị Phương Trâm

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

alone I will step through the opening of a new year
the world dead silent in the wordless rain
startled by the crowing of another generation
from the underworld more urgent is my calling

trừ tịch

Bước một mình qua ngưỡng cửa năm
Nhân gian tịch mịch tiếng mưa thầm
Chợt đầu vẳng tiếng gà lai kiếp
Báo vẫn đêm đầy ở cõi âm


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.

HUMAN NATURE | Hoàng Xuân Sơn

Lê Vĩnh Tài, Lý Đợi, Bùi Chát , Nguyễn Thị Phương Trâm

A poem in Vietnamese by Hoàng Xuân Sơn
Translator: Nguyễn Thị Phương Trâm

spit garbage, say whatever you want to say
drunk or not we have but one life, we bleed
we dig our furrows we plant our seeds
may it be dusk or dawn we do not heed

we couldn’t sleep. we got up. we peed
no one can stop you from breaking confidence
O la la looming! like Sony Hoang or not
just note this. and I’ll leave it at that

if you are Lý Đợi, đợi = wait, then wait & savour
the wine. (Bùi = nutty) more than (Chát = sour)
nothing is left to add by the master
Lê Vĩnh Tài pee or not still, the cower

NHÂN BANG

( gợi ý từ một tút của Phương Trâm)

Cứ lải nhải đi ta không say
Đời chỉ cho ta một luống cày
Xới đất. hay là nằm xuống ngủ
Mặc bình minh lên với cỏ cây

Không ngủ. Ta cần đi giải thủy
Kìa ai trưng biển cấm đướng đài
Ô là là ! ai như sơn núi
Nháp xong. ôm bài thơ chạy dài

Đã là lý đợi cứ ngồi đợi
Rượu ngọt. sao bùi bảo chát chua
Vô bậy thêm miếng thầy lê vĩnh
Tè không ra được thì chịu thua

)(
dzuidzui@sumake.13avril25


Hoàng Xuân Sơn 

A renowned poet, born 1942, writes under various pseudonyms: Hoàng Xuân Sơn, Sử Mặc, Hoàng Hà Tỉnh, Vô Ðịnh… 

Hometown: Vỹ Dạ, Huế.

Lý Thường Kiệt Primary  

Bán Công High School and Quốc Học Huế High School

Bachelor of philosophy, and postgraduate of political science and commerce at The university of Văn Khoa Sài Gòn. 

Worked at the Ministry of Transport and Communication, a branch of the General Department of Postal Service of the Republic of Vietnam.

After 1975 worked in the Postal Office for 7 years. December 1981 settled in Montreal, Canada.

The poet’s career span from 1970 to the present day his work has been published in many literary publications. In vietnam: Văn, Chính Văn, Diễn  Ðàn, Khởi Hành, Nghiên Cứu Văn Học, Ðối Diện, Thân Hữu, Xây Dựng Nông Thôn, Ngưỡng Cửa, Nhà Văn. Outside of Vietnam: Làng Văn, Văn Học, Văn, Thế Kỷ 21, Chủ Ðề,  Sóng, Sóng Văn, Nắng Mới, Saigon Times, Hợp Lưu, Phố Văn,  Gío Văn , Canh Tân, Ði Tới, tạp chí Thơ. 

Collaborating platforms: Litviet (U.S.A), Tienve (Australia), Vanchuongviet… and the translations of his poetry into English by Nguyễn Thị Phương Trâm on SONGNGUTAITRAM.

Published work:

Viễn Phố (thơ, Việt Chiến xb 1988)

Huế Buồn Chi (thơ,93)

Lục Bát (thơ, 2005)

Ref: vanchuongviet.org

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.

waiting for a friend | Mai Thảo

Trâm's sketch of Mai Thảo

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

I know the road is long and it’s late
I left the door open and the stair lights on
You’re here now and I can’t remember whence you came
in the sightless sleep came the steady raindrops

đợi bạn

Nửa khuya đợi bạn từ xa tới
Cửa mở cầu thang để sáng đèn
Bạn tới lúc nào không biết nữa
Mưa thả đều trên giấc ngủ đen


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.

What is poetry? | Bùi Chát

poem by Bùi Chát
translation by Nguyễn Thị Phương Trâm

What is poetry?

– How the f..k would I know!
You’re the poet, you tell me!


Bùi Chát is the poet, writer, publisher and artist’s pen name. Bùi Quang Viễn was born on October 22, 1979, at Hố Nai, Biên Hòa, Đồng Nai Province, Việt Nam. Born to family of patriotic Catholic refugees from the North in 1954.

Graduated in 2001 from the Faculty of Literature, Linguistics, and Journalism of Hồ Chí Minh City University of Social Sciences and Humanities. Bùi Chát named and cofounded Nhóm Mở Miệng (Open Mouth Group) with the poet and writer Lý Đợi, promoting Graveyard & Garbage Poetry.

Nhà Xuất bản Giấy Vụn (Scrap Paper Publishing House), also founded by Bùi Chát, distributions of xerographically structured sensitive works by “pavement poets”. In 2004, Bùi Chát and cofounder Lý Đợi were detained for two days for distributing flyers at a poetry reading raided by the authority. In 2005, the culture department blocked their performance at the Goethe Institute in Hà Nội.

In 2011, Bùi Chát was awarded the IPA Freedom to Publish Prize “for his exemplary courage in upholding the freedom to publish.” He was arrested on his return to Việt Nam after receiving the award in Buenos Aires and detained for several days.

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.

waiting a thousand year | Mai Thảo

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

waiting a thousand year at the precipice
home to the delusions of the same name
living a shitty life in the gutter
because they have not came

one shitty face is like any other shitty face
when it’s time for the bats to wake up
across the sky is the spreading stench
from here to the end of the horizon

owls and crows in a crowd
tearing to shreds the leaves in the trees
the stench of dirt from the few souls lost
the stench of sewage and rising rot

worthless influencers ruling the world
cheap tactics scaremongering the old
opportunists and users, you’re not dead yet
and these demons are already laughing

with my head down I can leave this land of the living
like a tired star that wants to resign from its position
like a boat far from shore heading for the seas
heading for the elephant graveyard for the final rest

make our ancestors wade through the swamps
such swampy paths could never take our shoes
the shoes are dirty so let them be
on the way home through the West Gate

chờ đợi nghìn năm

Ta đợi ngàn năm tới trước thềm
Đó về huyễn ảo đã cùng tên
Song loan chưa tới trong chờ đợi
Đành với hoàng hôn sống nhá nhem

Tối sáng không phân nhọ mặt người
Là giờ xuất hiện của bầy dơi
Rợp trời những cánh bay hôi hám
Trên lối ta đi tới cuối trời

Quạ cú ào theo kín một bầy
Cáo chồn mai phục mỗi hàng cây
Dăm con ma xó tanh mùi đất
Cống rãnh chui lùn cũng bủa vây

Bàn độc chen chân chó nhảy ngồi
Mồ chiều xanh lạnh lửa ma trơi
Giậu chưa đổ đã bìm chen lấn
Huyệt chửa đào xong đã quỷ cười

Ta cúi đầu đi khỏi bãi đời
Như vì sao mỏi muốn lìa ngôi
Như thuyền xa bến vào muôn biển
Tới đáy rừng chôn giấc ngủ voi

Làm người xưa bước qua lầy lội
Đường lội làm sao giữ được giầy
Giầy đã lấm rồi thôi để mặc
Trên lối đi về hướng Cửa Tây


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.

unnecessary | Mai Thảo

Mai Thảo by Đinh Trường Chinh

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

Not a single shadow at high noon and in the boundless sky
As unnecessary as the clouds are the sunlight
Even more unnecessary is my liberal heart
Enduring an ancient pain that never part

thừa

Một vũng trời cao đứng bóng trưa
Nhìn lên bỗng thấy nắng mây thừa
Thừa thêm ta nữa tâm tiền tiến
Mà khối đau buồn rất cổ xưa


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.

TO FADE AWAY – PHÔI PHA | Trịnh Công Sơn

Nguyễn Thị Phương Trâm

Lyric by Trịnh Công Sơn
Translation by Nguyễn Thị Phương Trâm

night behold
a home coming moon
itching for the road
short is life
age is predestined
right by our landing
a mere breeze passing

all alone
far away is home
the nights alone
bitter wine
consumed a lifetime
payback for the joys
O so let them wait

to the end of days
home to the sun light
home to the drizzle
a drifter’s home coming right then
at end of the world
drifting clouds

O go home
there’s nothing out there
so what of youth
sometimes it’s
a home coming light
in the dark of night
by the past survive.

PHÔI PHA

Ôm lòng đêm
nhìn vầng trăng mới về
nhớ chân giang hồ
ôi phù du
từng tuổi xuân đã già
một ngày kia đến bờ
đời người như gió qua

Không còn ai
đường về ôi quá dài
những đêm xa người
chén rượu cay
một đời tôi uống hoài
trả lại từng tin vui
cho nhân gian chờ đợi

Về ngồi trong những ngày
nhìn từng hôm nắng ngời
nhìn từng khi mưa bay
có những ai xa đời quay về lại
về lại nơi cuối trời
làm mây trôi

Thôi về đi
đường trần đâu có gì
tóc xanh mấy mùa
có nhiều khi
từ vườn khuya bước về
bàn chân ai rất nhẹ
tựa hồn những năm xưa.


Trịnh Công Sơn was a Vietnamese, musician, songwriter, painter and poet. Born: 28 February 1939, Buon Ma Thuot, Vietnam. Died: 1 April 2001, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.

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.

home | Mai Thảo

Về quê, Northern Vietnam. Photography by Nguyễn Thị Phương Trâm

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

Breakfast leftovers
The sudden guilt the moment it is thrown in the bin
A gem is each grain of rice mother said
Now there’s not even a grain for her to fill her stomach

quê nhà

Cơm thừa mỗi sáng quăng thùng rác
Tay quẳng từng khi bỗng ngại ngần
Mẹ dặn hạt cơm là hạt ngọc
Mẹ giờ không có miếng cơm ăn


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.