Alfian Sa'at's "The Merlion"

daryl

New member
i feel it is apt to quote Alfian Sa'at's "The Merlion" in it's entirety here:

http://www.usp.nus.edu.sg/post/singapore/literature/poetry/saat/merlion.html

"I wish it had paws," you said,
"It's quite grotesque the way it is,
you know, limbless; can you
imagine it writhing in the water,
like some post-Chernobyl nightmare?
I mean, how does it move? Like a
torpedo? Or does it shoulder itself
against the currents, gnashing with frustration,
its furious mane bleached
the colour of a drowned sun?
But take a second look at it,
how it is poised so terrestrially,
marooned on this rough shore,
as if unsure of its rightful
harbour. Could it be that,
having taken to this unaccustomed limpidity,
it has decided to abandon the seaweed-haunted
depths for land? Perhaps it is even ashamed
(But what a bold front!)
to have been a creature of the sea; look at how
it tries to purge itself of its aquatic ancestry,
in this ceaseless torrent of denial, draining
the body of rivers of histories, lymphatic memories.
What a riddle, this lesser brother of the Sphinx.
What sibling polarity, how its sister's lips are sealed
with self-knowledge and how its own jaws
clamp open in self-doubt, still
surprised after all these years."

"Yet...what brand new sun can dry
the iridescent slime from the scales
and what fresh rain wash the sting of salt
from those chalk-blind eyes?"

A pause.

"And why does it keep spewing that way?
I mean, you know, I mean..."

"I know exactly what you mean," I said,
Eyeing the blond highlights in your black hair
And your blue lenses the shadow of a foreign sky.
It spews continually if only to ruffle
its own reflection in the water; such reminders
will only scare a creature so eager to reinvent itself."

Another pause.

"Yes," you finally replied, in that acquired accent of yours,
"Well, yes, but I still do wish it had paws."
 
aw. apparently my original thread title was too offensive or something, it got edited.

feels awful being a b**tard child
 
Last edited:
I love Alfian, he's a great guy and a wonderful poet and playwright.

There is an on-going joke amongst the local poetry scene that you ain't a true Singaporean poet till you've done a Merlion poem.
 
the unedited title is good, it captured my attention :)
excuse me but i dont understand the poetry, is it related to the content?

dont have to feel awful just because one is born out of wedlock
also why must one be branded a true singaporean poet, why not just a true poet?
 
also why must one be branded a true singaporean poet, why not just a true poet?

you don't have to be if you don't want to be.

every great writer though is largely defined by his identity and his experiences. Alfian's stuff is wonderful because it's relevant to us, and it describes our social condition. He's received praise from overseas because it helps them better appreciate Singaporean culture.

Good poetry makes the you look at foreign things in a familiar light, and familiar things in a foreign light- and always makes you see things in a new way.
 
my daddy is a lion and my mommy is a mermaid
but i am not a lion i am not a mermaid i am a fish
why is everyone trying to be a lion
you cant swim you drown drown drown drown
in your fake fur
 
Last edited:
our culture is that we have no culture. chinese malay indian hybrids raised in an Americanized culture. our roots point to our ancestors' heritage but we do not relate. our experience points us to the white man but our skin tells us we're not. what then?

what about the poem do you not understand?
 
Its about someone who's been away for very long seeing the Merlion and asking all the questions but still identifying it in all its beauty

I must say this is a real good read, I dislike all the Singaporean poems that's in my text cos the theme and ideal is all the same but this is a real twist.....Lifts my skeptical view on local poets.....
 
Last edited:
we do retain certain asian traits, such as being generally anti-social and worried about what everyone else thinks of us
 
Our culture is slowly dying a miserable. tortured death. Youths find it increasingly hard to relate because its cool to rebel and rage against your parents, and put on a fake accent and hate everything and post about it on the internet. This is because we take things for granted, we know not of the suffering of our great-grandfathers/mothers but only know how to reap the fruits of their labor. Sad? Perhaps, but this isn't just a local phenomenon.
 
Our culture is slowly dying a miserable. tortured death. Youths find it increasingly hard to relate because its cool to rebel and rage against your parents, and put on a fake accent and hate everything and post about it on the internet. This is because we take things for granted, we know not of the suffering of our great-grandfathers/mothers but only know how to reap the fruits of their labor. Sad? Perhaps, but this isn't just a local phenomenon.

If you're talking about Singaporean culture.
It's funny, because then what you're speaking of IS our culture.
Our culture is a base of caucasian with a sprinkle of various asian races, put in an oven and left to burn.
Whatever the white man does is great! All hail the white man.
 
Its about someone who's been away for very long seeing the Merlion and asking all the questions but still identifying it in all its beauty

I must say this is a real good read, I dislike all the Singaporean poems that's in my text cos the theme and ideal is all the same but this is a real twist.....Lifts my skeptical view on local poets.....
ah now i get it, thanks for simplifying the content..
can the original title bastard child be reinstated again? :mrgreen:
 
=visa

its heavy to be called a great writer.. beautiful writings maybe
hopefully gettin praise overseas is not another adopted singapore culture
i have to agree there is good poetry & bad poetry, good poet & bad poet but true poet?

:twisted:
 
=daryl
the whole poem,
maybe im not as highly educated as the writer
just look at the english, its language difficult to digest..
to not have a culture, now that is something to ponder upon..

:p
 

the day before, i was studying at the starbucks at one fullerton. i walked over to the merlion and sat down for a while. like 15 mins. i must say that's the longest i've ever been with the merlion. there were tourists all around but i was the only singaporean there that day.

that said, i don't think singaporeans identify with the merlion at all. it's just a tourism icon.
 
e: the poem is about how the merlion, a UNIQUELY SINGAPOREAN icon to the rest of the world, represents everything that is lacking in our culture in a very ironic light, seeing as it's supposed to be glorified and all
 
Back
Top