Evenings flicker, a million times
on a million television screens
with Jackie Chan.
I am learning to walk
through unwashed streets
with memories of flu in the neighbourhood.
我不會, 我不會忘記。1
Our lives are different under a strange democracy
of rats, for street protests are possible
when politicians cough over the latest crisis.
Is this my city?
我不會, 我不會离開。2
Is an economy of rats possible
or do we need casinos?
Those metal domes
phallic in the skyline, those shiny aspiring skyscrapers
in Hong Kong, Singapore, Macau.
These are cities I cherish:
the new blueprints with old drafts of buildings,
that spurt of concrete of twelve storeys, a spit of land
for trees, shrubs and barbecue pits.
We have imagined ourselves:
we live like rats, our appetites bite and bite.
1 I will not, I will not forget.
2 I will not, I will not depart.
A poem from The Mental Life of Cities, a poetry collection by Prof. Eddie Tay of the Department of English, which recently won the biennial 2012 Singapore Literature Prize (English Category)
Social Bookmarks