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Issue 29
Poetry

Poems from On Riverbank Emilia Tangoa’s Home Drowns

  • by Ana Varela Tafur
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  • March, 2024

Wisdom

I am from the rainforest, from its wetlands.
All year long I live through rainy seasons.
My days are liquid ropes expanding
and nourishing fallen leaves full of unfamiliar insects.

With the ants I build labyrinths,
gather mushrooms and roots spreading themselves
into sandy microcosms.
The rains make swamps of the flatlands.
Day is quick and slow like a dispersing sun.

A refuge of logs, a water phantom, surrounds me.
On my way home, I walk on a path between two rivers.
A rowboat waits for me at makeshift ports.
A never-ending downpour runs through me.

Gravity makes clouds full of droplets fall on my body.
The water does not withhold itself from its many storms.
Even though I don’t have an umbrella, I miss the steady drizzle.
“Weather is the rain’s concern,” my mother says.

 

 

Saint Rose and her Wind

In August, one waits for a wind stripped of its power
without the excesses of lifting waves and untethering canoes.

Although the news forecasts unprecedented winds,
there is no sign of Saint Rose of Lima’s presence.

For some reason the lupunas’ canopies
are the first ones to hear her hoarse and agitated voice.

The winds in the tropics speak to the inhabitants
and summon stories of riverside dwellers in floating houses.

Many have seen roofs fly off cardboard homes
and have ridden the waves in their topa rafts to avoid sinking.

She is the chief of national police who comes and goes without a trace.
Where is the howling we have been expecting and dread?

Years ago, we heard her break branches, destroy plastic sheet roofs.
By the end of August, we expect her to pass calmly through the city.

It is probable the Saint of Lima’s legend
will prolong the mysteries of future hurricanes.

 

Translated by Yaccaira Salvatierra

 

Photo: Khamkéo Vilaysing, Unsplash.
  • Ana Varela Tafur

Born in the Amazon region of Peru, Ana Varela Tafur is the author of Lo que no veo en visiones (first prize, Premio Copé 2001), Voces desde la orilla (2001), Dama en el escenario (2001), and Estancias de Emilia Tangoa (2022), which won the National Literature Prize for poetry in Peru in 2023. Some of her poems can be found in Diálogo, Lucero, Huizache, Literary Amazonia, and Amazonian Literary Review, among others. She has been widely anthologized and received her PhD in Spanish Literature, focused on the Amazon, in 2018. She lives in Richmond, California.

  • Yaccaira Salvatierra

Yaccaira Salvatierra’s poems have appeared in POETRY Magazine, The Nation, Huizache, and Rattle, among others. Her collection, Sons of Salt, is forthcoming from BOA Editions in 2024. She is an organizer for the San Francisco International Flor y Canto Literary Festival and a contributing editor for Huizache. She is currently translating a poetry collection by Peruvian poet Ana Varela Tafur. Some of her translations can be found in About Place Journal and Plume. She lives in Oakland, California, where she is a dedicated educator.

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