The evening settles in
 with a warm spring drizzle
 that washes through the skies, 
 the trees and the earth.
 
 There's nowhere than the gravel road, 
 for the toads from the nearby lake
 to bask under the warm rainy weather, 
 to show their thin-skin coats, 
 engage intimate romance 
 so at the tail end of the day, 
 they can satiate a season's urge.
 And so the males leap
 out of the pond's undergrowth, 
 onto the warm gravel road, 
 their hairy ampits itching for rain salt
 as they look for mounted areas
 to ensconce themselves
 for the spring suana...
 
 Approaching headlamps
 from another world flash into their eyes, 
 SUVs that speed like
 blind monsters which won't slow down
 their own itching rage till they 
 gasp at their journey's end.
 
 But the toads sit tight and indifferent -
 they would rather stare at the oncomers 
 with disdainfully bulging eyes.
 And even so, the thralls 
 of the warm evening shower 
 is too great to make them bulge.
 
 They will not respond when I skirt 
 through their lot, keeping them 
 underneath the car, 
 between the wheels as I go past.
 
 They are blind to dying: 
 and except for the snake, 
 the eternal enemy, nothing shakes them 
 in the image of death.
 
 Not particularly when they are caught 
 in the heat of spring's passionate carousals, 
 when the steamy lakeside rain 
 opens up their skin pores 
 for them to refill the winter's hunger 
 this time  - in self abandon -
 with a frothing palate of heavenly juices.                
This poem has not been translated into any other language yet.
I would like to translate this poem
 
                    