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Outstanding Award


Junior Secondary



A visual representation of "Rain Scene" by Collier Nogues

CHAN Yat Hei Esther
St. Mary's Canossian College


My work is inspired by the poem ‘Rain Scene’ by Collier Nogues. I captured the scene of the poet and her daughter Opal enjoying the rain in the white-tiled park in their neighbourhood in Hong Kong. The mother smiles affectionately as she watches her daughter hug the tree and hold her ‘ocean’ with an infectious smile on her face. It is drizzling but the sky is still clear and bright, highlighting the delighted, peaceful and safe mood despite the heavy rain. I used mostly light colours in my piece to create a jubilant and refreshing atmosphere. Green is the major colour tone of my artwork as it has strong association with peace and cyclical nature of life. Even though the writer may sometimes reminisce about her hometown, she feels contented and comfortable staying in Hong Kong as long as Opal, her anchor, is around.

Rain Scene


for Opal, and for Hong Kong, the city she’ll grow up in

Sheltered by the white-tiled park overhang,
I watch you run in nonstop loops. You’ve found
a shallow soup-bowl where a tree was planted once
but didn’t take. Its surviving neighbor trees, each
in their own soup, quiver in the light rain
while you stomp, soaking the socks I’ll soak again
tonight to leach from them their rust-red mud.
Of course I remember the pleasure this is.

This isn’t the color my mud was. Mine
was white, limestone ground down to river clay
and rife with flint and fossils. At every flood
we found dead things risen with the water.
In case the road washed out we had the truck,
and when the creek rose past truck-axle-height,
my father drove the tractor to the highway
and hitched a ride to get more milk.

More milk here takes merely a walk
down to the Circle K, whose clerk knows you
and says hello. Hello you say to her, or if she says
jóu sàhn, you say jóu sàhn. Jóu sàhn, says the fruit stand man
who offers you an orange. You take words in
and give them back, but sometimes changed: orange
becomes ocean–because of cháang, I think–
which in our family now describes both fruit and sea.

The sea comes very near the fruit stand, surging in
on Lam Tsuen River’s tide from Plover Cove,
but the watercourse is paved and engineered, no chance
of flood no matter how the rain comes down. My mother
would have liked that, would have liked the refuge
this city makes, the care its people take to greet
each other. Thank you for the ocean, you say to the man.
What she would have made of you, I wonder.

I wonder where her heaven is. Far from my father’s,
surely. Or near, in that for both of them, just as for me,
you are every heaven’s anchor. I am glad we’ve anchored here,
where I watch you watching for snails, the giant ones
who come out in the rain, bigger than the ocean you’ve forgotten
in your awe, are those its hands you ask and no, I say,
they are a kind of eyes, a kind which can bear water.
Some creatures, even cities, make their own shelter.

Collier Nogues


The poem was first published on the Writing Plus website as part of the Urban Love Poetry Contest for the 2020 Hong Kong International Literary Festival Schools Programme:
https://www.writingplus.hk/urban-love-poem-2020, reprinted with the permission of the poet.