
-
Pakistan blows up dam embankment as it braces for flood surge
-
Lego posts record sales, sees market share growing further: CEO
-
France overlook Ekitike for World Cup qualifiers, Akliouche called up
-
Rain no obstacle, Lyles insists ahead of Diamond League finals
-
Record-breaking rain fuels deadly floods in India's Jammu region
-
Showtime for Venice Film Festival where stars and Gaza protesters gather
-
Almodovar urges Spain cut ties with Israel over Gaza
-
Macron gives 'full support' to embattled PM as crisis looms in France
-
Stock markets diverge awaiting Nvidia earnings
-
German cabinet agrees steps to boost army recruitment
-
Denmark summons US diplomat over Greenland 'interference'
-
German factory outfitters warn of 'crisis' from US tariffs
-
Israel ups pressure on Gaza City as Trump eyes post-war plan
-
Floods, landslides kill at least 30 in India's Jammu region
-
Former player comes out as bisexual in Australian Rules first
-
Indian spin great Ashwin calls time on IPL career
-
India faces world football ban for second time in three years
-
Globetrotter Herzog to get special Venice award
-
'Old things work': Argentines giving new life to e-waste
-
Showtime for Venice Film Festival, with monsters, aliens, Clooney and Roberts
-
Thai woman jailed for 43 years for lese-majeste freed
-
What is swatting? Shooting hoaxes target campuses across US
-
Row over Bosnia's Jewish treasure raising funds for Gaza
-
Police search Australian bush for gunman after two officers killed
-
NZ rugby player who suffered multiple concussions dies aged 39
-
Former Australian Rules player comes out as bisexual in first
-
French, German, Polish leaders to visit Moldova in show of force in face of Russia
-
US tariffs on Indian goods double to 50% over Russian oil purchases
-
Feudal warlord statue beheaded in Japan
-
Tokyo logs record 10 days of 35C or more
-
Sinner, Swiatek romp through at US Open as Gauff struggles
-
Brazil to face South Korea, Japan in World Cup build-up
-
Asian markets diverge with eyes on Nvidia earnings
-
Osaka out to recapture sparkle at US Open
-
China's rulers push party role before WWII anniversary
-
Pakistan's monsoon misery: nature's fury, man's mistake
-
SpaceX answers critics with successful Starship test flight
-
Nightlife falls silent as Ecuador's narco gangs take charge
-
Unnamed skeletons? US museum at center of ethical debate
-
France returns skull of beheaded king to Madagascar
-
SpaceX's Starship megarocket launches on latest test flight
-
James Moore HR Solutions' Julie Kniseley to Address the Workforce Impact of AI at FABTECH 2025
-
Lexaria Attending the 27th Annual H.C. Wainwright Global Investment Conference
-
Silver Scott Mines, Inc. Strengthens Growth Strategy with Appointment of Dr. Elliot Justin, Renowned Physician, Innovator, and Entrepreneur, to Advisory Board
-
American Antimony Corporation (Operating as Xtra Energy Corporation) Appoints Aarya Shahsavar, P.Eng., as Executive Vice President of Engineering and Director
-
IGC Pharma Announces Coverage Report by Ascendiant Capital Markets about the "Reports Q1 results. We believe more positive clinical data and progress in 2025 to be strong catalysts for stock. Raising P/T to $4.50."
-
WidePoint's Subsidiary Soft-ex Announces Strategic Global Go-To-Market Alliance with Ingram Micro to Optimize Microsoft License Management
-
Formerra Appointed Distributor for Italy's Epaflex TPU Lines in the UK & Ireland
-
Vero Technologies to Showcase AI-Enhanced Asset Finance Platform at ELFA Innovation Lab Conference & Exhibition 2025
-
United States Antimony Corporation Enters Into Purchase Agreement with Select Institutional Investor for $18 Million Registered Direct Offering of Common Stock

In Indonesia, French poet Rimbaud's voyage still a mystery
In the summer of 1876, rebel French poet Arthur Rimbaud arrived on the Indonesian island of Java, enlisting in the colonial Dutch army before deserting after just two weeks, an escape still shrouded in mystery nearly 150 years later.
Today in Java's Salatiga city, where coffee trees and bougainvilleas bloom, only a plaque at the entrance of the mayor's residence recognises the fleeting passage of a man who inspired writers from James Joyce to Jim Morrison.
Such has been the influence of the poet, regarded as one of France's best, that the Indonesian education and culture ministry is considering paying tribute to his Javan journey with a memorial trail.
"I believe nearly every Indonesian poet who sees poetry as an expression of the subconscious and a manifestation of surrealism has read Arthur Rimbaud at least once in their life," said Salatiga-born writer Triyanto Triwikromo.
In the poem "Bad Blood" from an 1873 collection, Rimbaud wrote: "My daytime is done; I am leaving Europe. The air of the sea will burn my lungs; lost climates will turn my skin to leather."
The poet -- whose French hometown will celebrate his 170th birthday on October 20 -- had imagined in another collection leaving for "peppery, soggy countries" and "archipelagos of stars".
He arrived in Batavia, a noisy port that served as the Dutch East Indies capital now known as Jakarta, on July 23, 1876 after signing up for six years in the colonial Dutch army, according to biographers.
Rimbaud then set sail again for Java's Semarang city, more than 400 kilometres (250 miles) away, before boarding a colonial rail network built to ferry troops and spices.
He left with fellow recruits, including some French compatriots, southward to Ambarawa town, according to Jamie James, author of 2011's "Rimbaud in Java: the Lost Voyage".
- 'Soles of wind' -
Ambarawa station is now disused and houses a railway museum, but it offers tourists steam train connections to another disused station, Tuntang, from which Rimbaud once walked the last 10 kilometres to Salatiga.
"I've never heard of Rimbaud," said Okta, a tour guide who like many Indonesians uses one name, before climbing aboard an old wooden carriage.
But "it's a fascinating story that we should tell to our visitors", she added, saying 100,000 tourists come annually, 30 percent of them foreigners.
On 15 August 1876, the author of the anti-military poem "The Sleeper in the Valley" fled his barracks before being sent off to battle in Aceh, on Sumatra island.
Authorities are now planning a memorial trail tying in with the plaque that states Rimbaud "stayed in Salatiga from 2 to 15 August 1876".
"We are open to any initiative to highlight Rimbaud's time in Java," Hilmar Farid, a director-general at the education and culture ministry, told AFP.
Sri Sarwanti, head of Salatiga's library and archives office, said they wanted to "strengthen and remind people of what Arthur Rimbaud has brought to our region".
Leaving Salatiga, a town of 1,000 at the time, compared with around 200,000 today, perhaps the poet laid low in a hut at the foot of the Merbabu volcano, taking a stab at the pastoral life he imagined in "Bad Blood".
"To swim, trample the grass, hunt, above all smoke: drink hard liquors like boiling metals -- as those dear ancestors did round the fire," he wrote.
But the final weeks in Indonesia for the poet -- who died in Marseille at 37 -- remain a mystery.
After deserting his post, it is only known that Rimbaud set sail for Europe, later arriving in Cyprus, before moving on to Yemen and Ethiopia.
A.Malone--AMWN