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Special Focus on Leong Liew Geok –“The Gardener Gets High”

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This is Part Ten of SP’s first “Special Focus” series, looking at the extraordinary gardening poems of Leong Liew Geok. Born in Penang, Malaysia, Leong moved to Singapore in 1981. Thereafter, she published two important collections of poems, Love Is Not Enough (1991) and Women without Men (2000). The gardening poems in her second book represent a signal achievement in Singapore poetry. Alternating between lyrics and dramatic monologues, they are a sustained engagement with the cultivation of both self and environment. Appearing every Thursday, the series will end with the publication of a new gardening poem by Leong. Photographs taken by the poet provide intimate glimpses of her garden and, by extension, Singapore, the Garden City.

 

The Gardener Gets High
by Leong Liew Geok

 

Hispid thumbs and fingers,
Or knuckled fists for leaves;
One glance at spines teeming
And you’d think thrice to touch
Rosettes with spikes, tufted glochids;
Barbs, areoled ribs. Sunseekers
Like these find thirst selfish,
Rude. They’d rot from overwatering.

In orange, lemon, cherry or pink,
their blooms stun with stuck-on looks.
How hoary! hispidilous! hirsute!
An enclave — one hundred pots
Sitting in my garden, courting
Tropic greenness with phallic deserts.

 

Reprinted here with the kind permissions of author and Marshall Cavendish International (Asia) Pte Ltd, the poem “The Gardener Gets High” first appeared in Women without Men (Times Books International, 2000).

 

Leong Liew Geok

Born in Penang, Malaysia, Leong Liew Geok has lived in Singapore since 1981. She is the author of Love is Not Enough (1991) and Women without Men (2000). She edited More than Half the Sky: Creative Writings by Thirty Singaporean Women (1998; repr. 2009 ) and Literary Singapore: A directory of contemporary writing in Singapore (2011) for the National Arts Council. She taught at the Department of English Language and Literature, National University of Singapore from 1981-2002. More recently, her poems have appeared online in Softblow Poetry Journal and Blue Lyra Review. She is (still!) working on her third collection of poems, envisaged for publication in 2016.

 

The Gardener Gets High

Part of Leong Liew Geok’s cactus and succulent collection (showing species of agave, aloe, astrophytum, cephalocereus, euphorbia, faucaria, gasteria, haworthia, pachypodium, rebutia, stapelia, etc.). Photo by Leong.

 

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The intent of Singapore Poetry’s “Special Focus” series is to highlight an important aspect of the work of an established poet of Singapore. This aspect may be a thematic thread or a formal preoccupation; it will provide a vital way into the poet’s writings. By making available a substantial selection of poems, SP hopes to encourage both readerly and critical immersion in the poet’s body of work. We begin to see connections, reiterations and reformulations that are missed in reading just one poem.

 


Filed under: Poetry Tagged: Leong Liew Geok, Marshall Cavendish, Special Focus Series, Times Books International

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