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[Throughout 2018, we have committed to publishing a selection of poems from each month of Ian Boyden’s manuscript “A Forest of Names.” Over the course of a year, Boyden translated the 5,196 names of schoolchildren crushed in the 2008 Sichuan Earthquake. He then began a collection of poems, each written on the day of each child’s birth. An in-depth discussion of these poems can be read in “Fault Line: An Introduction to A Forest of Names.” —Eds.]
Detail from Ai Weiwei: Fault Line. Foreground: a marble replica of twisted iron rebar pulled from one of the schools that collapsed in the Sichuan Earthquake (Rebar and Case, 2014). Background: detail of the names of the 5,196 school children killed in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. Photograph by Ian Boyden.
OCTOBER 6
龍強 Dragon-vigor
Tell us what was written with your shadow.
Long after the cicada’s song enters autumn’s soil, the brittle husks that once held their singing bodies still hold dearly to the branches where they once sang.
OCTOBER 10
藝豪 Heroic Art
He kneads the earth and earth measures his absence.
Studies of impossible form rise above brittle structures of our failing.
OCTOBER 11
芯儀 Ceremonial Heart
Flame above the candle’s black wick. Wax fills with the light of its own burning.
OCTOBER 12
蝶 Butterfly
Autumn wings, the wind. Somewhere there’s a tree, whose every leaf dreams of flight.
OCTOBER 13
鋒光 Spear Point’s Glimmer
The point itself cut a hole into darkness, so the rest of the body could bathe in light.
OCTOBER 14
世杰 Era of the Burning Tree
This is how we see heroes: someone on fire, but not consumed by flame.
OCTOBER 15
義恆 Lasting Justice
A name never answered.
Each time the case is made, the moon-white heart drifts beyond the ridgeline.
OCTOBER 18
雲琴 Cloud Zither
A silk-white anvil resonant across the blue sky.
Pillar of Earth. Pillar of Heaven.
Jade, fallen from the highest peaks, weeps in the pool of sound.
OCTOBER 21
傳宇 Conduit of the Universe
The shuttle passes back and forth, the bobbin turns within.
The white sail, woven strand by strand, fills with ash-black wind.
OCTOBER 22
芊榆 Luxuriant Elm
A thousand leaves quivering yes, yes. And the boat, dreaming of water, grows within the tree.
OCTOBER 24
坤益 Earth’s Excess
At the brimming basin he asked the earth god why her body trembled,
why his childhood was cut short.
OCTOBER 26
璐妍 Beautiful as an Open Road
Held for years, the jade gradually became translucent. Clouds dispersed from within the stone,
as did the paths traced in meditation.
OCTOBER 29
可 Possible
Cup and plate get set each evening.
OCTOBER 30
萌科 Sprouting Scholar
The smallest leaf calls out to sun and moon. It, too, is a student of light.
OCTOBER 31
竟敬 Unexpected Honor
Born into unscored music, the lute still trembles with autumn leaves.
Read more from Ian Boyden’s “A Forest of Names” in the following links:
“Introduction to ‘A Forest of Names'”
A Forest of Names — January selections
A Forest of Names — February selections
A Forest of Names — March selections
A Forest of Names — April selections
A Forest of Names — May selections
A Forest of Names — June selections
A Forest of Names — July selections
A Forest of Names — August selections
A Forest of Names — September selections
A Forest of Names — October selections
A Forest of Names — November selections
A Forest of Names — December selections
“Fragile as an Urn: An Interview with Ian Boyden”
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