HABIB TENGOURit seemed a great distance
to the brink of the canal
unreckoned and put to no use
—keith waldrop
Habib Tengour 1947–
mostaganem, algeria
T
engour is one of the foremost contemporary Maghrebian poets. His
work focuses on the postcolonial and nomadic condition of his people.
Tengour’s father was a militant nationalist, and when Tengour was five,the family moved to France to escape persecution by the police. After studying
sociology and anthropology, Tengour returned to Algeria to complete his na-
tional service. His writing concerns issues of identity and the invention of a
narrative structure beyond traditional French lyric form. Principal works: Tapa-
paktaques, la poésie-île, 1976; La Nacre à l’âme, 1981; Schistes et Tahmad II, 1983;
Sultan Galiev, ou la rupture de stocks, 1985; L’Épreuve de l’Arc, 1990.
Secret in Broad Daylight
‘‘... Always slower, and your gestures caught little by little in the glue of a strange torpor,
finally unmoving, so lost that my voice can’t reach you any longer... ’’
—Gustave RoudSTATE IBLACK, such a soul in exile slowly makes its way towards
death. Here’s winter. The body of the beggars twists at
a subway opening. It’s not this cold that I fear or the stomach’s hunger
although a beggar at your threshold, my limbs blue.
It was already my story to live to love you to lose myself
in the dark of my belt.