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by Ko Un


  Intent on restoring Korea’s independence by all means,

  he went into exile in Shanghai.

  One day at dawn, Yi Jong-nak

  woke from a dream where families back home

  dressed in white were waving their hands.

  After that he fell sick.

  He went to a German hospital,

  to a Japanese hospital.

  He did not want to die

  in a Japanese hospital,

  so he moved to one in the French concession.

  One day,

  An Chang-ho visited him in hospital.

  He told him to believe in Christianity.

  Sick, Yi Jong-nak replied

  that he could not believe in order to live;

  once he got well he would believe with a sound mind.

  One day

  he said quietly to his comrade Jeong Hwa-am,

  ‘Hwa-am, I’m dying. Go on fighting for me as well.’

  Clutching his comrade’s hand

  he died.

  He did nothing really to contribute to the independence movement,

  not one act to speak of.

  His forearms were so strong an awl could not pierce them.

  He was good at the violin, good at sports,

  good at singing at drinking parties.

  Yi Jong-nak stood briefly on a small corner of his times, then went away.

  The Lock-seller

  Even a wooden shack had to have a lock.

  Anyone who went to sleep leaving the front gate open was a fool.

  Anyone who went to sleep without locking the door to his room was a fool.

  Midsummer evenings,

  while people were killing and being killed on the front,

  in the rear thieves made their rounds by night.

  Everyone had to have a padlock.

  Safely locked in,

  they had to hear in their dreams

  the waves of the night sea.

  A dusty wind was blowing in Gongdeok-dong in Seoul.

  At the entrance to the alley

  a seller of locks and keys

  walked by, metal locks jangling from his clothes,

  dressed in clothes heavy with clumps of iron.

  Buy my keys!

  Buy my locks!

  Keys repaired. Locks repaired.

  Buy my locks!

  You can trust only to locks.

  Buy my locks, buy my keys!

  Two passing middle-school boys asked:

  ‘Hey, Mister!

  What’s better, keyhole or key?’

  The lock-seller laughed.

  ‘Hey kids, I don’t know,

  go home and ask your parents.’

  Yi Yohan the Orphan

  Not one child was crying.

  On the plaza in front of Busan station in 1952

  there were children five-years-old,

  six-years-old,

  eight-years-old,

  and some you could not tell:

  five? six? eight?

  Some bigger ones were eleven.

  Some smaller ones were nine.

  The children, wearing old woollen hats,

  had been sent from Daegu, were headed

  for Zion Orphanage at Songdo, Busan.

  Gap-toothed children

  deaf children

  children with long trails of snot.

  When they passed through tunnels

  they were covered with coal smoke

  in trains without windows

  None was crying.

  Crying was cowardly. Crying was shameful.

  One of those children

  was named Yi Yohan.

  He had been given the family name of a pastor at a Daegu church.

  His Christian name was that of John the Evangelist.

  He knew nothing of his mother,

  nothing of his father.

  Later, this child

  grew up to be one of the policemen who opened fire

  to suppress the students protesting

  in front of the Presidential Mansion

  during the April Revolution in 1960.

  Police sergeant Yi Yohan.

  South Gate Street, Suwon

  Soldiers,

  gum sellers,

  horse-carts,

  ox-carts,

  piles of droppings in the wake of the carts,

  paper-boys,

  combs, fine-toothed bamboo combs, glass beads, cheap necklaces,

  urchin beggars,

  Japanese-era trucks,

  American army trucks.

  One old beggar lay prostrate all day long.

  No sign of human pity anywhere.

  The hungry grew hungrier.

  The cold grew colder.

  In Suwon’s South Gate Street,

  Myeong-gu

  had no shit inside him today as the day before. None.

  He could get no food

  anywhere round the city gate.

  For three soju bottles, he could get a few crumbs of bread.

  But here there was nothing like that in sight.

  Only, only

  the world.

  Myeong-gu’s only thought was for a bowl of rice.

  Hey, monks in mountains, what use are those koans you’re contemplating?

  Cheonggye Stream

  The clothes they were wearing were American-made,

  trousers from relief supplies,

  and dyed American military jackets –

  but

  in the university’s French department

  students dreamed of themselves as Sartre,

  Camus,

  André Malraux.

  America outside,

  France inside.

  Perhaps for that reason,

  the long Cheonggye Stream

  flowing through Seoul between Jong-no and Ulji-ro

  was not Korea’s Hudson River

  but Korea’s Seine.

  There was the Café Seine in Myeong-dong, too.

  The Seine was a place for washing clothes,

  the Seine was a sewer

  with melon-sized balls of shit floating down.

  The Seine was a rubbish dump.

  A little farther down the Seine

  on the bank toward Gwansu-dong

  was Division Four of Cheonggye Stream

  where the shanty town began

  and battles for survival were intense.

  Girls working in clothing factories along Cheonggye Stream

  lived in rented rooms in shanties.

  The owners were kind-hearted by night,

  full of abuse by day.

  It was one month since Jo Ok-ja had come to Seoul

  as a factory girl.

  Every one of her fingers ached.

  She worked all day at a sewing machine,

  with nothing to eat but five small pieces of bread.

  During overtime one night

  she felt dizzy, collapsed.

  She liked nights.

  Sometimes, in her dreams,

  she saw her mother.

  Heukseok-dong

  One dim bulb dangled from the ceiling

  of the comic books reading-room.

  The shoe store stank of leather.

  Flies tended bar, no customers.

  In the barbershop, honey soap.

  Cheap bread stands.

  In the mending shop, an old worn-out sewing machine.

  All the way along, nothing but wooden shacks,

  steep alleys barely wide enough for one

  all the way along

  There was a single water tap down below.

  People lined up with empty water-cans

  and a 10-hwan coin; once the cans were filled,

  they carried them panting up the alley.

  While people were living like this,

  on the battlefront people died

  and at the rear, people were born.

  One woman gave birth two days ago,
<
br />   and here she was out carrying water.

  Her breasts hung

  dangling from beneath her blouse.

  She gave the child the name

  of its father’s North Korean home.

  Yu Seon-cheon.

  Seon-cheon! Seon-cheon!

  Our darling Seon-cheon!

  A sliver moon rose early

  to shine over this slum-village on a hill.

  The Porter at Seoul Station

  At 5 a.m. the night train from Busan arrived,

  an hour after the end of curfew.

  He had to be ready at the exit.

  Soon the passengers debarked.

  The haggling over porterage was brief.

  One large suitcase,

  one sack of grain,

  one small case,

  all loaded onto the A-frame,

  while the owner followed behind.

  He carried the load as far as the bus stop

  across the road,

  then demanded five hundred hwan,

  saying the bag was far too heavy.

  He refused to put the bag down, demanding payment.

  Fingers wagged as they quarreled.

  Finally the porter won

  after reducing the charge

  to four hundred hwan.

  No need to be polite, no saying

  Thanks or

  Good bye.

  The porter, Im Ho-sun,

  had lost a son the day before.

  Today he had come out

  and made 400 hwan on his first load.

  Once work was over at nightfall

  he would down a shot of soju.

  Only then would sorrow for his dead son

  come welling up.

  Until then

  Seoul station spurned sorrow;

  at the most extreme moments of life,

  sorrow too is superfluous.

  The 1920 Massacre

  Even in the wilds of Manchuria, their place of exile,

  the people from Korea

  built schools in their villages.

  Teaching their children

  was the core of the Koreans’ life.

  They built houses with floors of clay,

  planted maize,

  and barley.

  After erecting four corner pillars of logs

  they covered the roofs with stones packed close like moss

  to keep them warm.

  The buckwheat harvest was better than the barley.

  Even scattered wildly

  as if by a mad girl on a seesaw,

  it’s tough, grows well.

  They raised hens, too,

  feeding them corn.

  In winter, the people had only buckwheat noodles.

  At night

  a pine root was used to light the lamps.

  Tomorrow they would exchange

  a handful of corn for a handful of salt.

  Their kimchi, unsalted, was tasteless.

  At school

  they sang the school song.

  Instructor Kim Chang-hwan of the Sinheung Military Academy

  shouted commands in a voice so resonant

  it echoed off the surrounding hills.

  They studied Korean language,

  Korean history,

  Korean geography,

  calligraphy,

  composition,

  singing,

  arithmetic, multiplication tables.

  All such villages were burned to the ground.

  Everyone was killed.

  Everything ransacked.

  Nobody was left to grind their teeth.

  Old Cha Il-man

  As the southern forces marched northward,

  at Suritjae village on the banks of the Hantan River

  one hundred humble thatched houses were set on fire.

  All but one man died, leaving a deathly silence.

  The one who survived, Cha Il-man, was sick and old.

  He took one look at the dead village.

  Crawling outside,

  he drank lye beneath the wooden step.

  His legs soon stiffened.

  Nobody remained.

  He himself was a word that nobody

  could understand.

  Hong Jin-su

  His nickname was Inchworm.

  On weeding days

  he said not a word all day.

  Some people working alone

  mutter and

  mutter,

  saying things no one can understand.

  But Inchworm Hong Jin-su said never a word.

  Herons would fly in close, then fly away again.

  In February 1951,

  shortly before the second draft for the national militia,

  the village youths

  all drank castor oil to induce diarrhoea.

  They had to lose weight.

  Under 45 kilograms, they would be disqualified.

  Later, however, whether 40 kg or 30,

  they all passed the medical exam, second class.

  Inchworm cut off the top of his right index finger

  with an adze.

  He buried the severed fingertip on the hill behind his house.

  Within twelve days the finger healed.

  Meanwhile he failed the medical, classed third grade.

  Relieved, he set about selling tofu.

  Putting the tofu trays on his shoulder

  he left home early, before breakfast time.

  Buy my tofu.

  Buy my tofu.

  He did evening rounds, too.

  Buy my tofu.

  Buy my tofu.

  After his parents quit the world

  he provided his four younger siblings with food,

  fed them as well the tofu that was left unsold.

  VOLUME 18

  Ong-nye’s Husband

  Putilovka village in far-away Hassan,

  where three borders meet:

  Korea, Manchuria, Russia.

  In secret, Korean farmers

  would cross into that region,

  as yet free of bandits.

  They built hovels to keep out wind and rain

  and survived by grazing cattle and goats

  every day on the grass of three countries.

  There they lived, snaring birds

  on the banks of the Tumen,

  catching wild deer,

  sowing grain and hunting.

  While washing clothes by a stream,

  hunter Jang Gil-seong’s daughter Ong-nye

  met a man on a horse.

  His eyes were hollow

  with hunger.

  He couldn’t even dismount by himself

  Ong-nye wiped her wet hands and helped him down.

  She went back home for some cold rice

  and returned to feed him.

  A Korean independence fighter,

  he had crossed the river

  on his dead commander’s horse,

  pursued by the Japanese.

  Actually, he’d rowed across,

  the horse swam.

  He hadn’t eaten for three days.

  Ong-nye brought him home.

  When her father returned from hunting, she begged:

  Let this man become my husband.

  Allow your daughter

  to become this man’s wife,

  Father!

  Her father Jang Gil-seong

  tossed his catch – two cock-pheasants –

  at the stranger’s feet.

  Old Madman

  He goes about with a dog’s bone stuck in his belt.

  He gobbles up earthworms

  and frogs, too, all deftly caught

  Heuh heuh,

  heuh heuh heuh,

  he laughs, looking at the sky,

  the sky where hawks hover.

  Neighbourhood kids

  tease him,

  throwing stones.

  Heuh heuh,

  he laughs.

&nbs
p; At the sound of a plane he falls flat on his back.

  Asleep

  under the bridge beyond the village,

  his face becomes utterly holy,

  utterly peaceful.

  When the curs bark at him

  he bows his head obsequiously, twisting his hands, saying:

  ‘I did wrong.

  I did wrong.’

  Tae-sun’s grandmother explains:

  ‘He’s a fellow from Uitteum in Sangchon-ri

  who went mad after losing two sons.’

  One was conscripted in the Pacific War and never came back.

  One was drafted in the Korean War and never came back.

  Gunfire in Bongdong-myeon, Wanju

  Soldiers of the People’s Army

  were despatched to every hamlet in the occupied areas.

  One soldier arrived in Bongdong-myeon, Wanju, North Jeolla province.

  A greenhorn soldier, always laughing,

  he drank the liquor

  that the villagers offered with a village girl,

  then went into the bean-field with her.

  This became known.

  His comrades hastily shot him: no trial, nothing.

  After that, not one but three soldiers

  were stationed in Bongdong-myeon.

  A little later, two left.

  The third stayed for the last two months

  of occupation, then left.

  He never accepted a single leaf of tobacco,

 

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