
Poems by the Commended Foyle Young Poets of the Year
Poems by the Commended Foyle Young Poets of the Year
‘It means the world to me to win the Foyle Award. Now I have the courage to show everyone my voice; to demonstrate that I am worthy of being listened to and that there are many in the world willing to listen.’ – Evie Lockwood, top 15 winner, Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award 2024
Foyle Young Poets of the Year Commended Anthology
The Poetry Society
22 Betterton Street London WC2H 9BX poetrysociety.org.uk
Cover: James Brown, jamesbrown.info
ISBN: 978 1 911046 55 4
© The Poetry Society and authors, 2025
The title of this anthology, We Sail Paper Boats, is taken from Jake Moss’s commended poem ‘Sometimes I wonder what death feels like….’.
This anthology is available in a range of accessible formats.
Please don’t hesitate to contact us at fyp@poetrysociety.org.uk
Content warning: this poem contains references to racist language.
‘Judging the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award this year was a genuinely restorative experience; to see so many poems written by young people, while initially daunting, reassured me that poetry is healthier than ever, and continues to lure fresh minds into its weird, millennia-old conversation. I was impressed by those poets replying to the older, more formally regular traditions, and how deftly they managed things like metre and rhyme, but also by those poets finding new shapes, structures and cadences for their concerns; most of all I was impressed by how imaginatively and wholeheartedly these poets ventured into the world, asked questions, and replied to it: with tenderness, social conscience, and novelty of thought and phrase. Vanessa and I were moved to laughter, to gasps of surprise, and (rarest of all for us two) to silence. I had a blast!’
The Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award has been finding, celebrating and supporting the very best young poets from around the world since 1998. Founded and run by The Poetry Society, the award has been supported by the Foyle Foundation since 2001, and is firmly established as the key competition for young poets aged between 11 and 17 years.
In 2024, we received over 17,000 poems from over 6,600 poets from 113 countries. 15 top poets and 85 commended poets were selected by judges Vanessa Kisuule and Jack Underwood; together, these 100 winners showcase some of the most exciting young voices today. Reflecting on the judging experience, Vanessa commented: ‘I had a glimmer of intrigue as I read the first line of each entry: where might this poem take me? This year’s entries took me to so many wondrous and unexpected places. I loved the poems that were playful with form and language and the poems that stood in humble awe at the beauty of nature. Some poems made me cackle and others made my stomach twist in recognition with the pain and struggle they depicted. Jack and I were awestruck at how precocious and assured these poets are. Amongst them are the future stars of the poetry world and I’m honoured to have had this glimpse into the crystal ball.’
This anthology collects the 56 poems commended in the competition, and celebrates the names of all 100 winning poets. A sister anthology, collecting the top winners, is freely available to read online (as are a
wide selection of anthologies from previous years of the competition and accompanying teaching resources). All of the poems were written by poets aged 11–17. These anthologies demonstrate a breath-taking array of talent that promises to inspire poetry lovers everywhere.
You might find one or two of the poems difficult to read. Content warnings are included on the Contents page and at the top of any poems where this applies. We recommend younger readers ask a trusted adult to look at the poems before reading them alone. To enhance your enjoyment of the poems, videos of some of the young poets reading their work are available on The Poetry Society’s YouTube channel.
The young poets represented in this anthology come from all across the UK, from Kilmarnock to the Isle of Wight. Further afield, poets hailing from Canada, China, Japan and USA rub shoulders in these pages. The result is a dazzling display of talent that showcases a vast range of poetic styles, tones and subject matter.
The poems in this anthology touch on family, friendship and coming of age with deft, precision and grace. A number of poems draw on moments from school – a teacher’s wig that becomes an inside joke, a school trip to an art gallery, and the frustrations of homework. They illuminate the inner feelings of the poet while also shining a light on familiar settings and their complexities. Poems titled after food sing the praises of personal favourites, whilst also musing on capitalism, relationships and class. These poems are not afraid to think out loud. In doing so, they allow us to sit with them and view the world through their perspectives.
The title of this anthology, We Sail Paper Boats, is taken from commended poet Jake Moss’s poem ‘Sometimes I wonder what death feels like…’. In the poem, death is the ‘undercurrent …we sail paper boats over.’ Through the poem, the poet approaches a challenging topic with an open heart. This captures the ethos at the heart of the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award: we hope it inspires more young people to write, to share their work and enter the competition.
We Sail Paper Boats marks a celebration of some of the most inventive, playful and sharp emerging young poets around the world. As Jack Underwood commented, these poets reassure us ‘that poetry is healthier than ever, and continues to lure fresh minds into its weird, millennia-old conversation.’
Yousef Alawi · Freya Beer · Grace Bowen · Holly Hellman · Charlie Jolley · Evie Lockwood · Isaac Meredith · Indy Moon · Rina Olsen · Idris Scrase ·
Adrien Sevaux · Meredith Wade · Ernest Wakeford · Juliana Xinwen Pan · Tasha Yang
Maama Affaidu · Mariya Ali · Lara Antelo-Miles · Mallik Arjun Ahluwalia
· Khadija Bashir · Lily Brady · Roberto Bravo · Juliet Capgras · Cameron
Carvalho · Cheryl Chen · Max Cooke · Lewis Corry · Shani Dicks · Chloe
Ding · Lucy Edmunds · Holly Ellis · Síomha Gallagher Charlton · Honor
Giardini · Tabitha Giddings · Izzy Goldberg · Dorit Greene · Kyla Guimaraes
· Lillia Hammond · Aurora C. Haselfoot Flint · Jasmine Heath · Tilde Hill
· Emma Catherine Hoff · Radian Hong · Nabeeha Hoque · Sophia Irwin
· Adanna Paradise Isiodu · Hema Iyer · Derek Jiu · Emma Rose Johnson
· Leah Katz · Bryan Kim Short · Astrid King · Ela Kumcuoglu · Ethan
Kwak · Elise Buckingham Lazell · Maya Le Her · Kyo Lee · Max LeMaitre
Nugent · Aster Li · Olivia Mandache · Maryam Zeshan · Michelle Masood · Sophie Mauritz · Sarah McCready · Poppy McSweeney · Flora Molnar · Alex
Moore · Jake Moss · Archana Nadarajah · Zhuoyuan Nie · Vanessa Y. Niu
· Chloe Oulahan · Camille Polyakova · Yeshe Rai · Laura Russell · Aarush
Saha · Simone van der Schaft · Shmayam Shahid · Isabelle Sheath · Harpreet
Singh · Devanshi Sinha · Usmi Sohoni · Chantel Sorae · Isobel Starks · Albie
Sullivan · Leena Tageldin · Ayanna Uppal · Abi Vance · Humayra Vohra · Katie Walker · Evan Wang · Matilda May Wiggins · Anna Winkelmann · Eva Woolven · WYR · Yarema Yakobchuk · Ziyi Yan · Patrick Yates · Rina
Yoshikawa · Chelsea Zhu
Crisp and golden, sizzling bright, Bacon greets the morning light, A savory scent that fills the air, A breakfast treat beyond compare. Strips of joy in pan or plate, A taste that foodies celebrate, From humble roots, a pork delight, To culinary heights, it takes flight.
Paired with eggs or stacked on toast, It’s bacon that we crave the most, Wrapped around a juicy date, Or crumbled on a salad plate. In BLTs, it plays its part, A crunchy bite, a work of art, In burgers tall, it finds its place, Adding flavor, saving grace. Sweet and smoky, savory too, A symphony of taste in view, Maple glazed or peppered fine, Each variation, so divine.
From breakfast feast to evening snack, Its presence never does it lack, Bacon bits or full strip stack, In every form, it brings us back. Temptation in a frying pan, From dawn till dusk, it fuels our plan, A guilty pleasure, sure to stay, Bacon makes a brighter day. For those who love this crispy fare, A treat that’s rare, beyond compare,
Whether smoked or cured with care, Its flavor lingers everywhere. Bacon-wrapped and bacon-topped, Once you start, you can’t be stopped, In soups and stews, it finds its way, A cherished part of our buffet. So here’s to bacon, pure delight, A taste that brings us sheer delight, In every dish, it plays its role, Bacon, food that feeds the soul.
My mother tells me to never go –near the edge of a cliff past chest deep in the sea into the bluebell forest by myself down the back alley as a shortcut into town or to the play park after 9pm on a Saturday night. But I want to ask her why not the football pitch the hospital school a music festival or a Taylor Swift dance class because, according to the news, these are the places it isn’t safe to be a kid.
Albie Sullivan
After Kurt Vonnegut
Sing, o spirit
I invoke of thee
Sing of dreaded plague
Sing of death’s dark glee
For doth it not say in the 66th book of four great horsemen from the orient, too far to look
And one of them wore many crowns on their head It struck a spear in thy throat And in thy lungs pure’st dread
And this here plague was not a new foe it was quite recent from two decades ago
And then the highest of ministers He said “Look at these graphs! Some of ye will die lest ye stay at your hearths!”
And the Highest of ministers doth he not say to stay away?
but he ate, drank and was merry And was ashamed the next day.
While ev’ry-one panicked and kept far away the saviours made a liquid to keep the horseman at bay
But the masses distrusted this major breakthrough and falsehoods and lies like vines they doth grew
But still many listened to what the saviours had said and were administered a liquid and did not end up dead
And we banished the horseman with inserting in thy arm a pin But in the battle of David and Goliath Does Goliath ever win?
Anna Winkelmann
Hopping up the stairs, the little ones are security guard-blasé
Gaze at the ceiling, jaws all swinging, eyes even wider when you say The real art’s inside. But they’re too busy spinning Eyes heavenward, utterly dazzled and grinning.
Alas small mouths make scathing critics, particularly poor Monet He, Cézanne, Van Gogh are boring. They’re bored (in unison, they complain)
Klimt, they concede, is kind of cool. Miró too, with his wacky doodles Picasso, they dismiss: this can’t be priceless, they’re not fooled.
Giggle round the gallery at all the boobs and bumcheeks Sprint past awestruck audiotours; it’s a game of hide-and-seek Flop down in the giftshop where they want a pen and notebook. They’ll draw the whole way home, for all the aggro that it took.
The answers to my questions
I asked ammamma if I could stay up watching television dramas with her
And she said yes
I asked ammamma if I could gobble the last slice of cake down
And she said why not
I asked ammamma if she would retell the stories of her at the beach
And she said I would love to,
She said storytelling is her form of teaching
I asked ammamma if she would take me shopping; just the two of us
She said who else would I take
She finds dress shopping a form of art hunting
And she said you don’t need to ask me
My answer is already yes
And I said will it always be a yes, ammamma
And she said ‘kunju’ of course it is
But ammamma how come when I asked if you’d stay forever, you stayed silent
And she said nothing
But with a smile of knowingness and nostalgia
I know it will be a No,no,no From you
Aster Li Ma Mi
Ma
Mi,
Is dinner ready yet?
Ah Ma,
I hate it when people tell me I have your face. I smile like Dad, I read like Dad, I speak like Dad, which is to say, hardly at all. When I got my first acceptance letter it was six in the morning and you refused to look at me all day. You just needed time, Dad said. It’s what’s best for the family. The next day you bought me something sweet from the bakery.
Niang,
I know this isn’t what you wanted. But I am so tired.
Ma Mi,
The apartment is so quiet in the winter but my sweater snags on the words swimming through the air. In the end we could not circumvent the age-old inter-generational dilemma: I want to leave and you want me to stay. I stopped sitting at the table last autumn but you remain stubbornly in my periphery. We both cross our legs, each bent over a leftover plate of microwaved macaroni. We have the same posture, when we eat.
I have a friend, A vegan friend:
Who questions the painful irony, Of our ability to choose what’s lodged in the freezer tomb, and what comfortably sleeps in the living room,
Of our ability to crave a medium-rare cut like the other fellow, though in Sunday Dinner you can almost hear the cow bellow,
Of our ability to cry in the cinema when the little dog dies, while binging the delicacy of cheesy bacon fries.
I have a friend, A vegan friend:
Who questions the bold hypocrisy, Of those who preach to treasure all animal life, with consumerist purchase of plastic products rife,
Of those who march maintaining perfectly conditioned hair, bore from the vicious fruits of abused animal care,
Of those who march with pride in their light brown UGGs, intricately lined with the luscious feel of sheepskin rugs.
I have a friend, A vegan friend:
Who questions your way of life, Because of their love for animals, And so they couldn’t possibly fathom, how you can accept one collared ‘Miss Fluffy’–
– and another one branded ‘293’.
Aurora C. Haselfoot Flint these
& so the dragons spit me out onto the grass: i am too bitter even for them and their snake-smiles. unripe i am and far too green to be tasteful –those once-honest little girls: they are lying now in their beds in tears & tears in their pin-lace skin. even my brain-child doesn’t trust me now she’s seen me from inside my very thoughts and yet still hates me –11:21 pm, midnight, pencils soft stomach, paper orange light & ink: discoloured leaves. – there are too many teeth here for such a young girl: ‘i’m sorry’ i say as i bury what is left of my fingers
After Suji Kwock Kim and Walt Whitman
“as if whiteness were the heaven from which we fell, and not-whiteness our original sin, our lack, the crack where ‘outside comes in’ –”
“I chink, therefore I am. Take back your chinkenfreude, your Kung Flu. O Wall, show thy chink-O-rama, thy chinkerati, thy chink tank. You’ll chink like a stone.”
I am not it. I am not your virus, am not your coolie, your Yellow Peril, your rat, your spy. I am not your gook, your Ching Chong ding dong, your servant, your working machine, your Model Minority. I am not invisible. I am not an alien. I am Asian but not yours. I am nomad, I am warrior, I am Gobi Desert, I am Northern. I am scholar, I am farmer, I am rivers and mountains, I am Southern. I am a mother, a father, a daughter, a son. I am migrant, I am immigrant, I am infinite, I contain multitudes. I am your brother, your sister, I am not you. I am not it, I am not them, I am I.
Content referenceswarning: to languageracist
After the war, all I am left with are her tattered dresses, his pristine top hat, and a few beets, slowly fermenting on my bedside table.
Where’s my math homework you say? Umm, well, last night as I peacefully sat, My brain deep in thought, ‘bout my homework of course…
Aliens came down! And when I ran for cover, They grabbed me with their suckers! I was violently dragged away!
I tried to fight, I DID! Though they had me outnumbered, I poked at their array of eyes And pulled at their antennae.
It was no use, They pulled me onto a platform And they wired to my head A fiendish device!
From my hippocampus, It sucked, with a disrespectfulness quite unneeded, All the things I’d refused to tell them!
All the math I’d ever learned, Over many years of study, Flew from my mind, Because of this brain-draining operation!
My escape was an adventure, (I forget quite what I did,) Suffice to say I couldn’t add, So go ask some other kid!
Chantel Sorae
The flickering of a film. / Slippery and fickle. / Iridescent fuel seeps from her fingers. // It all comes to life in the darkroom.// Dreams are strung out on yarn. / Regaining clarity with the motions of a Polaroid. / Drawing lilac streaks out from abyssal ink. / Reproducing memories in the third person. // Unravelling in her mind. // She blinks and it’s like the shutter of a camera // She speaks as if she’s keeping to common time / A performance so perfect it can collapse in seconds. / Idle praise washes over her shrine. / Her body is a temple, / and no photos are allowed. // Existing as fragmented memories. / Imprisoned in the cubic metres of the brain. / Left to rot away in the backstage cemetery. // Neurons fire— / A lens replacement. / Electricity spirals— / Eyes crinkle for the photo. / Sparks ignite— // The flickering of a flame.
Somehow, the cobweb at the edge of the kitchen looks bigger without the spider. White body, six eyes. Ma, I can’t help but spin a conversation into confession. But here is what happened: I bruised myself on the front doorstep. The Chinese evergreens you forgot to bring from the car trunk ended up on my knees. When I felt lava creeping out of my fractures, I pushed myself into the freezer and slapped yam nutrition labels onto my skin. You believed you needed to cure this house
before you could save yourself, stitching band-aids onto our walls like a child. All the medical bills
stuffed in the paper shredder. By the oven, burnt ginger seeped into vanilla candles. I’m sorry.
I tossed your earrings down the shower drain. Right after, I heard you talk to yourself. Wash the radish. Call the doctor. Almond flour has 7 grams of protein. You spoon-fed me obligations to save me from superstition. Here is where you can pick up my medicine. Become a shopping list. Rescue houseplants from this wasteland. Ma, our conversations taught me how to avoid you. Instead of confrontation,
I crushed vitamins in Greek yogurt and cancelled my Spotify subscription. I thought we could reshape into parallel lines—extending beyond this plane you’ll take to the hospital. I must learn how to be mature
enough to keep a secret. When you hold this cup of jasmine tea in your hands, the noise of an old fan surrounds your torn body, clouding your two brown eyes.
When I first stepped into the park, I had four pieces of bread in my hand And now I had none.
So where did the bread go? Did I eat it?
NO!!!!
The geese ate it! Yes they ate it all! They had chased me around the park like a bunch of mad-geese
For only four pieces of bread! I ran and ran but there were just too many geese
So guess what?
I GAVE UP!
I threw the bread at the geese and they scrambled to get a piece. And that’s how four pieces of bread turned into none.
Geese
When that girl first stepped into our territory, She had four pieces of bread in her hand. But now she has none!
How sad!
I’m not even full yet! It all started when the girl unwrapped her bread. My, what good smelling bread!
So my buddies and I followed the girl. But the girl kept running away from us! So we chased the girl until she stopped.
The girl glared at us and threw the bread on the floor. FEAST TIME!
I had to push and dodge the other geese to get a bite!
We finished all the bread from this kind girl. And that’s how four pieces of bread turned into none.
Chloe Oulahan
I sit on the train
A man opposite
His hair and beard stick out everywhere
His hair is ginger
He is twice the size of everyone
A helmet appears on his head
A horn sticks out on either side
Slowly his clothes turn into a Viking’s
His bag into a shield
His bottle into a sword
No
No
No
Something different
The helmet disappears
A lion in his place
The lion-man yawns
He has very sharp teeth
He stands up
He walks to the doors on all fours with the bag in his mouth
The doors of the train close
I watch as he pads down the platform of Baker Street
Devanshi Sinha
10pm. Frog-blinking into darkness. “Let the mind wander…” says the Headspace man. Well, let’s wander. The infernal desert, rogue at 40mph; my rascal horse kicks up sand. I live in the straight-set, crocodilian, searingly rugged Wild West, Steeped and air-fried in tradition. The saloon doors swing, hazardous. Would I be happier there? No, comes the answer, I would be dead of heatstroke.
11pm. bedtime. lying then sitting then lying then staring. worrying. worrying about the clock. when i need to hear it, the ticking will stop. that day, the ticking inside will stop, too; time is my last idol left; impartial, eternal, pure; i understand this: the inside beats and if, one day, it stops to catch its breath? in mimicry of the outside, i am the pendulum will not save me then. a reflective surface, copying deafeningly.
11:30pm. Recently, I’ve tried to be interested in British things like Morrissey and saying sorry to automatic doors. I write poems about my heritage with words italicised in Hindi. I feel italicised. Feeling italicised means, I feel stressed and slightly askew all the time, tightroping the knife-edge of oblivion. I’m leaning over the abyss, Michael-Jackson-style. Things are great, really.
12am. a surge rushing up the throat. i hate this amniotic feeling don’t make me confront it. primeval truths cartwheel in the recesses; i was there, in the belly of the beast. (For nine months, that is. Ha-ha. Sorry, mum. Love you.)
1am. LIFE IS NON-RENEWABLE! SET THE ALARM: TOMORROW AT 4AM – MEANING, TODAY AT 4AM – WE REVIVE A LIFE AFRESH. TOMORROW (TODAY), A WALK, A RUN, THE GYM, THEN WE WRITE, WRITE, WRITE! CREATE, MORE THAN WE CONSUME. IT’S SO FEASIBLE, TANGIBLE. IT IS FIZZING THROUGH MY VEINS.
2am. somewhere, there are crimson lizards in a Sahara, pulsating in sync. there are caterpillars, too, contorting themselves, wretched, spiralling –there is a child that picks up a stick thinking it is a big stick (“Score!”), but actually, it is a huge brown thin writhing Carboniferous caterpillar.
3am. The inevitable memory: the sleepover where that ginger girl told me 3am is the hour of the horrors. The windchime tinkers, cervine and ghoulish, somehow suffusing its way inside through closed double-glazed windows. God protect me. Something, protect me. The coat thrown onto the chair forms a black cat’s silhouette and that feels protective enough.
4am. turn off that blasted alarm. thoughtfully, select a book you haven’t admitted you hate. read begrudgingly in dim light, worsen your myopia, progress 10 pages; then embrace the book, in your arms like a teddy bear, foetal and hopeful that somewhere in sleep, you both will commune, reconcile, and begin to love again.
Dorit Greene Sparrows
Sparrows
brown capped and thin skinned, fleeing from hedge to house.
A giggle on the wind, a swinging stick of song.
They shiver through hard air to safety,
tiny hearts tapping in feathered cages, fidgeting under the eaves.
Ela Kumcuoglu
Moth bent over hibiscus roots forgetting / the background, a swath of gaping brown / Fissures rooted in sourwood / a sea of wide pullulating seeds, plump / Spathes subtending its fleshy axis / And maybe in a dream of a white cloud ceiling they are spinning / all the hydrangeas, isoazimuthal around a white spinning disc / and the bottlebrushes and all the floating wild things / will fall into the oblique and chip their wings / For only hell could have split a moth’s wings into two / Split the moth into a sunk-eyed, spindle-legged division / and broken the circle of its escape / maybe the angels didn’t want to share paradise with the beautiful / and so they gave the moths the Earth// And maybe one day a child will fly a kite / or maybe it will be a flying kiss / And maybe he will wonder at himself, why everything is split / and he will look at the sky and the sea, wondering why they parted / Why the butterfly cannot drop down into the estuaries of heaven and kiss the angelfish / Why the mistletoe does not sprout love underwater / why it is that heaven and Earth are split when they are one / why his kite will see so much more than he does of a sky that could have once been his / Looking over at the moth, bent over hibiscus roots, seeing / Those wings that were tattered, like the tidewaters crooning for the love of the stars / that they are split, unless he stitches them together / bringing his hands together, clasping the sorrow out of it until it has stopped wondering / or else a more romantic way of bringing death to the weakest / bringing it home, fingers intertwined like the mountains had they not drifted apart from the clouds / pulling out some scotch tape, cursing the stars because they have never loved the sun like the rest of their brothers / fastening the moth’s wings together until it was as if they never parted / looking at the beauty of the wings now that they were whole / bending over the moth’s triptych, its beautiful body, the wings a perfect circle / forgetting everything for a moment…
Emma Catherine Hoff
Teardrops of water falling from blimps was a suggestion for putting out forest fires – there are very few steps, really. Connect the hoses to the swollen flying things and, forget the pump, sprinkle in a circle around the flames. “You can get a discount at Ralph’s if you bring your Book of Mormon.”
There is a crater in the ground – there is a fallen trunk, there is a squirrel, a brick wall, stragglers, rabbits emerging from the brush – “I was forty, in a bank line, and my mom made me get on my knees and bark” –and here are the blimps like superheroes in the sky, here they are, saving the houses on the top of the hill while the water trickles into puddles that are made dark by the smoke and sky. Dark like ink. “Mad cow disease.”
This is what will save us, he will say the same thing to the governor of California. He practices it all on us first; we stand and watch like birds, like cats slowly blinking, like snakes not blinking at all. We watch the man with two fractured ribs – “I fell,” “I tripped over my girlfriend’s ex,” “he won’t try that again.” All he wants to know is the way blimps glide and how he will get water to move perpetually against physics. The clouds collide, left behind in the trail of giant elephants in the sky. He keeps asbestos in the garage – “they’re making synthetic heroin” – and wants to know why his neighbor stole his phone. “I’ve never read a book from front to back.”
Emma Johnson G.O.A.T.
I bleat all night, I eat all day, I am goat, Can you stroke me? You may.
I know I am the best, Really the greatest, I huddle in a paddock of joy, And fashion: well, the latest.
My friends will tell you, I’m very sure, More than a few times, That my looks are to die for.
OI GOAT, That’s me.
Ethan Kwak
like that
i.
appa shrugs off a metaphorical coat it’s like that simple and easy like a needle at the doctor’s
cold rushes like the caress of white paper gowns
i hate the sand but today i am the sand i am the grit under God’s fingernails
ii.
i don’t want to be in the family photo i am soaked and this history does not want me in it the pictures mounted above the fireplace are a deer’s memory of hunting
iii.
remove your sunglasses for the afternoon the camera will remember everything for you
we were never here on the beach
we were just soggy paper cutouts pretending to be dry.
Flora Molnar
His outline marks the centre of the field in the radius of dusk. He stands in equilibrium, despite the exponential swoop of neck growing from his body, a cubic curve amongst our linear paths. He does not notice us, cushioning the bikes into the grass, putting up soft camp to observe him.
As our eyes adjust, he stretches out, seems to unfold into another shape – a circular triangle; triangular oval, maybe. Mathematics fails me. Suddenly, he is up in the air and we have to crane our necks to follow his flight, a cosine wave on the axis of the earth and trees, a scrawl of calculations against the waning white, like my father’s handwriting.
I never understood it, really, his near-mania for birds, outdoors, numbers. But here, I hear him smile and I feel it –
We are added together, an equals sign receiving its answer at the other end of proof.
A hot day at the beach
Little children depart cheerfully as they play
As the sun starts to set
The moon takes its shift covering the land filled with grains
No noise as her thoughts fill her head like a glass half full
The great big waves push, push and pull
The longer she stays
Her footsteps grow lighter
Every wave getting higher and higher
When she first arrived her head was heavy
Now her head and thoughts feel empty
The crowded thoughts start to leave
One day was one day at the beach
Listen, listen to the sound as she breathes.
sometimes on a dimly lit night the fireflies drive me down they feast upon my shadow and die between my teeth they sing to snapdragons and lead me towards the path of a first blossom; i am brought to their leader the new moon shining a white tree in july
I stand and wait
As our packaged items climb up the plastic conveyer belt. I look at mine and I look at theirs.
Instantly a family.
The mother is mighty like a rock. The children brawl like one creature And the noise that is made is a million people in four. The sharing-sized, family packet An ecstasy and agony at full volume. A parasite, pulsing to my heart’s surface. And their section takes up half the belt. Thick hugs of bread sliced evenly in a careful loaf
To be opened and shared. food and food and food that says, as the creature morphs and rears its neediest heads, We love through all its forms loud and large and blindly perfect. Nothing tastes better when my mother asked for milk and the one lonely bleep is crushed by the checkout as soon as it is sung.
After ‘Lilies Abounded’
I hope it feels like when you fall asleep in the car and your parents carry you into your bed. I hope it is the feeling of the perfect spot of sun to sit in on a Sunday; you close your eyes if you’re tired enough.
I hope it’s the feeling between awake and asleep when your muscles fall asleep before your eyes do. I hope it’s the feeling of the last bell of school; not excited for nothings, but needing less somethings.
I hope it’s the feeling when you are asleep in front of the TV; awake enough to listen but eyelids too heavy to look I want it to feel like looking at an old picture, and suddenly remembering the context.
It is an undercurrent that we sail paper boats over but we never see below the white water which nibbles and gnaws at the hull, water slipping in between any incidental tears.
Bedtime stories tell us of the calm flow beneath and that we will never see it from our fragile boats. So we fantasise and hope and wait but we never dive like a dog pawing a door open, just to sit there.
I never want to open the door because I know I can never hope hard enough to change the weather outside.
I hope to have the door opened for me and walk through it blindfolded,
locking up on my way out and tipping the doorman.
It is more nothing than any nothing we can see, but we think about it like it’s everything. It is so transcendentally intangible that we grasp and grab for it in the dark.
I want to know it is coming, but I never want it to come. I want it only to happen when I’m ready, but I never want to be ready. I don’t want to overstay my welcome, but I don’t want to leave too soon. I don’t want to be left alone, but I don’t want to leave others.
Sometimes I wonder what death feels like, not because I’m scared, but because I don’t understand what to be scared of –
When the Kaiser Chiefs stop playing
And the lights are turned back on
When fake friendships disappear And all contact is lost
When prom is a distant memory
And we’ve all moved on
I know that you will always be there
To argue with me
About if Mr Zacher wears a wig
Katie Walker
Reader,
Why are you afraid of zombies?
Is it the sickening way they walk, Their gory insides churning? Do their low groans make you shiver, Do they?
Zombies, however hard they try, Will always be dead.
Humans, however hard we try, Will always be dying. Are you upset by their ruthless killings? Does it tear you apart to see something so terrible? We are no better than zombies.
Khadija Bashir
The Chai Wala has feathered lashes, and a brow drawn over bronze skin. His head is always bowed, and as his eyes flutter to meet the sun’s gentle rays, I can see tears pierce his gaze.
I wave my hands at him, And he saunters over, with all the grace of a peacock, the tears hastily drying at the horizon of his gold irises.
Chai Wala, what is your name? The question rolls off my tongue; the chai flows into the saucer.
He smiles, it’s written in the leaves. How soft his lips look, though they are downturned.
Chai Wala, why do you cry so?
Silence. I drink the tea, the rush of heat scalding my mouth. Oh, it must be a trick of the light. He turns away, silk robes fluttering in the breeze. In his absence, I can make out the sound of clucking tongues, and the disapproval etched in every woman’s powdered face.
The Chai Wala smells of tea; his hands are delicate, yet calloused, wrinkled with threads of saffron.
Through the thinness of his white clothes, I can see, Welts of crimson trailing across the small of his back, so much like the stripes of the tigers from his homeland.
Chai Wala, why do you cry so?
He pretends not to hear, but in the answering breeze, I hear. It’s written in the leaves
It happened again. I left the porch light on but the moths didn’t show. It happened: aging. I left the porch light on. The night closed in on me.
I lose happening. The moths arrive late. The sun smothers the porch light.
Memory happens upon me like dawn and the moths eat it away.
I happen upon your mouth, the imperfect light— full of thinning sound.
I happened to kill a moth once. Its body morphed into your losing.
This happens often. Tonight I empty the full mouth of cyclic loss. It happens that loss
is best swallowed undressed, like moths in the morning.
You happen to want morning. You join me to play a game we’ll both lose.
I happen to hate your lightness. It’s easier to forget this touch.
I happen to know your loss. At dawn the moths feed from your emptied mouth.
I happened to hope the moths would not show. Their love waning just like you.
You happen to be the sun. I, the emptying moth, swallow your light.
Kyo Lee
푸르다
Waiting for my flight you hold my hand & we start the clapping game with the song about the rabbit.
푸른 하늘 은하수
You went to Korea last summer to become beautiful. Returned brokenly so, double eyelids & sun-skinny. My turn. My favourite word is 푸름 because i cannot define it except with a world so young & green the horizon moves away as you run toward it. Because it’s an adjective. Because how can something so complete mean nothing when alone.
토끼 한 마리
The way the children sing it there are three rabbits: one fried, one steamed, one escaping to the west. i hate this part. i’m sorry. i’ve worn my green card like a rain coat. i’ve warmed myself on fires that killed. i abandoned shame three choruses ago tongue on tender rabbit meat.
가기도 잘도 간다 서쪽 나라로
Lost count of the lives i’ve wasted trying to be 푸름.
Let’s start again. The flight is boarding. Let’s sing the rabbits home.
Author’s note: lines are taken from the children’s song 반달 (1924), written and composed by 윤극영 (Yoon Geuk Young).
Mass production’s sickly sweet poster child
Bears an ingredient list requiring advanced education to comprehend
In a litter of thousands, weaned off pre-measured modified milk and Bred only on free-range factory conveyors directly to your tray
To eat half; or a third and then discard –
A high infant mortality rate.
Leah Katz
I.
we ate oranges under smoky skies, the cloying taste lingering on our breath, like a wish forgotten. the seraphic ichor trickles down your ochre-smeared lips, tracing an intricate constellation of your hometown. in apricity, the oranges are a topology of golden suns, each one pulsating with bittersweet nostalgia, just like you.
II.
back home, your brother can’t understand your yiddish accent. mottled by the delicacy of sunlit poppies, your tongue can only utter the dichotomy between here and home. there, the stars flicker like wildfire, framing misshapen half-moons. here, they are asphyxiated, outshone by yellowing crescents.
III.
at the dinner table, my uncle tells you to go back home. i think of the words you ask me how to spell in secret, a bird with broken wings. somewhere, an autopsy is being performed on an immigrant dream. next to me, a pink-ringed planet implodes. the doctors say we’re sorry, we’ve tried everything. mother says they didn’t try hard enough.
by your empty hospital bed, orange peel lies torn, mutilated exoskeletons of rotting universes. knee deep in a wailing storm, i’m an unclaimed sacrifice, why won’t you listen and take me, already?
thrashing lightning, the delicacy of a mayfly’s spine, leaks into my bones. your ruptured heartbeat bleeds onto the streets of your hometown, dawn lacing the persimmon stains.
In early 2018, I came across an article in a local paper about an ex-monk building a cathedral in Mejorada del Campo, just outside Madrid. For almost 60 years, with no help or architectural expertise, Justo Gallego Martínez had been constructing a cathedral that was almost the size of the Sagrada Familia, using waste and recycled materials. – Matthew Bremner
Scrap metal king, patron saint of human spirit, martyr to the endeavour of devotion, put down your trembling hands.
Leave the plaster and tin cans unattended.
Let the scaffold and newspaper clippings sway in the wind.
You who claimed the sky with ladders of sticks and string, you who built what empires pray to become with nothing but your hands and your Lord’s.
For you I will send down my kindest angel.
Aglow with filament scrap and christmas lights guided by a halo of crackly headphones they ensure every street-urchin is fed tonight, and will walk with a new pair of sandals plucked from the flurry of her plumage. He will join you, in the eaves of your soul, gently creaking.
In these halls of concrete and iron and fibreglass steel sculpted from the tremendous frailness of human things, he will help you paint one last bottle-wall before he carries you down to rest on her chicken wire wings.
the ambrosial garland collects at my fingertips. there is fragility hidden among the canyon. a truck-stop in nevada tells me all i need to know about the fallacy. we pass people selling clams, and i tug at your arm. each man weaves a con, spins a tale of golden pinpricks of light among the caliginous sky. each bite is bitter, each bite is symbolic. with each bite so dies my expectations, so do my feet scuff in the murky existence of the nevada dirt and discarded cigarette butts. each bite is spliced between an existence and a gentle metronome. each bite is cloying, burning my taste buds with a subtle ember. two dollars each, and you fished them out of your pocket, traced george washington’s worn face with each of your calloused fingertips. i think you might have used a portion of our gas money, i think your shoulders might have heaved. with a grunt, you passed on to me a token of fatherhood, and for a crisp second, the sky splintered, and god looked kindly on the both of us. i think you remember it with a deep abyss of sentiment. i think you sit in that diner five miles down the road, and you order the clams. you call them ‘nevada style’ and your dollar bill might be crisper now, george’s face sporting a look of subtle prosperity but i think that your hands are still calloused and your cheeks are still lined with the lingering imprints of a softly faded smile. i think that you remember the clams, the nevada zephyr. i think that i remember you. and that you remember me.
what you must understand is that you will never be enough—you will watch the shivering skeletons of the trees (not the forest) and you will know every letter in the alphabet by silhouette, but only the first of them matters when the stars flecking the peach-peel sky are nothing to one reddening your love-thirsty essay. you will ache all of the time, you will feel it in the marrow of your bones and it will gnaw at you, you, the communion of your own ambition, but you are no god, you are merely not-quite-average, hanging onto the pretence of your genius by a spidersilk thread; you might eat yourself alive but you will, you will burn for it. you will know that you are broken in some fundamental way and your fissures will drink up the starshine mica you tip into them to paint yourself gold, and you know it is kintsugi because you know your words but not well enough to fill your paper skies with red-ink stars and the letter that matters. i want to be everything that ever was and everything that ever will be, i want to be the tangerine mist
blanketing wannabe galaxies with disillusioned youths traversing the pallid asphalt, i want to be the electricity hurtling through the dead matter of a dead girl drowned in womanhood, i want, i want, i want
Maryam Zeshan
My sister, you would say we’d have this together and so we would.
The autumn breeze swayed around us, Our brown eyes hinted at everything.
The little poems I kept – I finally let you read that.
I’d finally let you braid my hair.
You braid it into two braids that flow.
We got our cups of hot chocolate, The alluring smell poisoning the air.
Best view tickets to the play of Little Women,
The ducks at the pond were quacking from one to ten.
The TV at home blares out a reporter’s heart.
You end up doing the same but to fight with the screen. You could win an award for your rants.
Then we go out upstairs with oil pastels to paint out our minds
The whole thing ends up in colourful faces, We leave them and go outside for a minute, My cold hands on your warm ones.
The umbrella blocks out the rainfall, It likes to listen to our conversations sometimes.
The memory could be stitched into my heart, If only my hands and my heart were warmed.
As I will be forever wrapped in my cocoon, My feet cold, my lips nipped frost.
Hands – red, tied and dried.
I’ll be looking for ‘home’ on the map.
Ask mother where it is and she mentions the wind running. The streets and kids run free with it.
But the lights delicately glow them up.
Ask father where home is and it’s where the trees usher people. Where intriguing conversations are sparked and knowledge is shared. Life is quiet but there are celebrations of happiness.
A middle-aged man.
At a children’s birthday party.
Wearing. just. a codpiece.
I fit in
Like a giraffe in a doll’s house
best friends cat and mouse
Gays in a Catholic school
French newts in a swimming pool
Stone-age peasants in an English class
A fridge magnet made of solid brass
I fit in
Like Skis in Barbados
Milk containing fructose
13 on a clock face
Teddy bears on a mace
Headphones on a worm
A teenager who wants to learn
A meow from a dog
A palace in a bog
I fit in
Like Mars on the earth
A husband’s opinion on birth
A camera in a washroom
A dry slide on a log flume
A wedding ring on a first date
A time management class running late
The beautiful duckling
A decapitated head chuckling
I fit in
Loquacious labyrinth lagniappe lavish luscious and lyrical, Luxurious loofah loggerhead, luxe likeable and legendary.
The English language confuses me, Makes me smile, Makes me snivel.
Peak means maximum height, peek refers to looking and pique gets your interest. Rain is water that falls from the sky, reign is a period of time and rein is a leather strap.
The English language confuses me, Makes me smile, Makes me snivel.
If a “.” is a full stop And “)” is a bracket, Then surely a “,” must be a full bracket stop, But no, it’s a comma. If a “-“ is a dash
Then surely a “=” is a double decker dash, But no, it’s an equal sign.
The English language confuses me, Makes me smile, Makes me snivel.
The English language makes me cry, Makes me chuckle, Makes me smile.
It inspires me and makes me write, Prose, plays, And poems like this one.
Author’s note: Stanza three is a text from Writer’s Digest.
Let me know how you are when you go.
Call me from the telephone box that no longer exists At the end of your street. Dial a code
From the cold and dark, glass pressed Against your knuckles, your breath
Clouding the insides of a glass lung. I want to hear the ringing in my ears. I want to hear you – happy/sad, Sweet/bitter – all your agonies, Held for so long inside a glass lung, As you spun the wheel, pressed signals, And let it unwind again. Call me
From the end of your tether. Call me
With the bottle empty at your feet. Call me In foul weather, call me with your wallet empty On the corner of the street. Call me
Faithful/faithless, beautiful/pitiful, Call me from a lung full of denial –
Call me when you can’t Call yourself okay, honestly.
Michelle Masood
After John McCrea
I want a diet coke & someone to tell me they love me every morning. I want acclaim. I want a clean bedroom. I want to read 300 books a year. I want an impressive shoe collection. I want a designer bag for each shoe. I want a handgun for each bag. I want the sun to finally blow open the clouds. I want a long drive on an empty highway. I want wind blowing my hair perpetually back. I want a beach, a tan, a long summer. I want a clear view of the city, of the moon, the flueve St. Laurent. I want smoke breaks. I want a cold shower with steam venerated, rising thick & fast like smoke. I want a short skirt & a long jacket. I want a hot mouth small & puckered like it’s making its way around a kumquat. I want it to hurt. I want a body with a peephole the size of a rib. I want a rib removal. I want a peephole big enough for God to see through. I want something smaller. I want a BMI ten lower than right now. I want revivals for anything that died before I could shrink to fit it. I want the original sin. I want the rest of them, too. I want it hard & fast & French. I want it now. Bad. Can’t you see how bad I want it?
Nabeeha Hoque
My fallen teeth fill a little blue box hidden away in my art drawer–lumps of pearly white, old blood lodged between the peaks.
Nobody wants to see them, which is understandable, I suppose. But, in my eyes, they are the only tactile remnant of a girl I used to know.
She was blurred into backgrounds, timid, and ignored. Lingering in my mind and only escaping at certain moments. Like yesterday, I noticed an ant burrowed in heaps of moss. I haven’t seen an ant in years. But my little girl did just yesterday. Families of hundreds, she’d sustain them with honey, watching their ways for hours while the sun hung high.
Looking into a mirror, I notice all her teeth grew back. Of course, there were gaps amongst her gums, but there are certainly no gaps in her memory. In my memory.
Patrick Yates
I hadn’t thought about the duvet in a while. Tracing my fingers quickly over the sheets for five minutes. Like usual. Till I didn’t really need to go.
The sheets were in the wash when I noticed a hole in the duvet Down and feather, wounded pouring out, slowly. Stained with silence, disrupted by a slowing monitor. My wrists had only then become inflamed.
And I spent more time with my duvet. Sleeping early and waking up too late. The slow years rushed to hours, ingraining my ears with the loudening blow of eyelids crashing onto skin.
Maybe I thought I could show a lifetime’s worth of love in a few days.
So I slip my fingers softly into each crevice of my sheets. Until the linen numbs my fingertips and darkens my eyes. Stroking the scars that I hadn’t noticed, before I pray the vigil with dusted rosary beads.
My duvet hollows in my hands, so now I sleep cold.
Poppy McSweeney
In this beautiful woodland
The birds tweet a song
In this beautiful woodland
The crickets sing along
In this beautiful woodland
The little creatures so hidden
In this beautiful woodland
Their tiny footsteps quicken
In this beautiful woodland
How could it get any better
In this beautiful woodland
I am writing this letter
In this beautiful woodland
The trees are so big
In this beautiful woodland
I heard a snapping twig
And the feeling so warm
I need a gentle yawn
So maybe this is my home
But sadly to say
I’m from a different biome
So this home I cannot stay
You are the second person of this trinity. Your words are Thank God for this chance
You are not you. You are a waiting bowl, a sieve. Grandfather’s hands are on our necks, fingers twisting in our hair, swallows nesting.
I can’t see his face. Just feel his thumb on my cranium, his breath moist on my skin.
Hear his disembodied voice re-embodied in you, filling you to the brim.
In this prayer, we are children kneeling at the door, listening to words not meant for our ears through a keyhole –knees aching on the hard floor. Grandfather’s voice rumbles like a plane on a runway. Your voice cuts in, crackling, the captain over the intercom.
In Korean, there are two ways of saying goodbye – one for leaving, one for staying behind.
Rina Yoshikawa
My mouth opens.
I try to close it, but it won’t. Unrecognizable sound comes out. Along with the sound of rapid breathing. Some say, dying walrus.
I wonder how many have actually encountered one before. Anyways, my heart beats faster. My body is shaking. I don’t know what’s funny anymore. I don’t remember if anything was funny ever. I’m laughing. It can’t stop laughing. There is a monster inside me. And it’s having a nice time.
Finally paid the rent, My car has a dent. Miercoles.
Where’s my sister’s book? Crap.
Oh right it’s there, look…
Quiero descanar, Pero hay que trabajar.
Finally on the bus. Can’t fall asleep, though, Gotta stay awake.
Finally, ahí está, Con su hermanita.
There’s mum, She has a big grocery bag.
Por fin. Finally. We’re here. What a long day we had.
An end or a beginning: I don’t quite know –only sure it will never be enough. I can already feel it: the vague joy of a memory, the way that time lurches forward. So I clutch to it –clammy hand clasped to cold bathroom sinks, as the girl you’ve known forever smiles at you in the mirror; a twinkle in your eyes that you had dressed as Cinderella aged just three. Youth tastes like sweat and smells of syrupy spirits, the sharp taste of innocence on the tongue of the young, in dresses, that glitter in the bright reflection of a future: not shared (not any more) later stained with the evening’s mistakes: that one too many, the person not to be kissed, a secret.
In the sticky summer heat, corridors narrow so the other door opens. Dare to step through it. a final hug, a whispered goodbye reflected in the gentle light of the stars at night, above the party.
I’ll miss you. I’ll miss you. I miss you as the sun starts to rise.
8:45
The girls take the 8:45 train. Fall asleep on the way, music and the rocking sway of wheel on rail. Cheeks pressed against shoulders, Just shy of black bikini straps under thick hoodies. Braided hair ready to war with wind, beanies firmly pulled over ears. The last stop – disembarking, and mooching around the city; confident in a successful ditching, into a jewellery shop. They will come back for matching blue bracelets at the end of the day. However for now, the inevitable pull of wet air forces them down the hill, towards the break in the road over the horizon to offensive rocks, and offending tide.
*
A temporary wind breaker, four towels flapping, flashes of white calf. Shivering naked but for wide eyes behind sea misted glasses, fetters of weaved embroidery thread, and beanie. Elastic snapping against skin barely heard over the roaring thunder of waves. One by one, all united in uniform, sharing an eagerly nervous look, pursed yet smirking lips and grabbing hands. Find the familiar place of palms, lines kissing lines. Squeezing tightly – for a moment, before setting off at a brisk jog towards the dusty Blue – gaining momentum just before the crash; Icy waves lick at ankles, then up backs of knees. Gasps as the water floods swimsuits, an Oh my god floating up beside the rhythmic laughter of the sea.
Lapping at necks now, darkening stray fly-aways. They kick and grin and squeal, pale skin Bruising blotchily under the attack of temperature and the violent affection of the sea; before surging forwards to shore, stumbling onto rocks. As the tide spits them back out, onto the beach.
You have been bent and beaten into the wood in which you live. The smell of cedar stings. You will be melted down, eventually, to make the shape of your father with your fingerprint.
c!Wilbur
Tired of losing Fired up by the Voices I hear
By the whispers in my ear
What do they say?
It’s hard to tell
They speak of prophecy
They speak of you and me
And time again, I’m told It was never meant to be.
Always losing hair over you
Always pacing, wondering what to do
But hey, I’m getting tired of holding myself Together
Feels like I’ve been chasing you Forever
The English Dept. sit round a table. They are wearing shawls – in summer? and discussing my propensity for freaky babies. What is it about them you like so much, Tabitha? The way they crawl and spit, that hairline fracture of wrongness (objection: they don’t have hair). I say nothing. I do not say it is because they hold up a mirror, and the mirror is a hammer –is that it? – with which to beat my own head. I am tobacco and wet paint. A fresh start in a council estate. I refuse to rhyme. I crown in my own ugliness and crawl out of my own womb. This is a whole new kind of story and the midwives have started to scream.
She wanted to give him a piece of her mind. I told her I did too.
But when no one’s looking, I thought I’d like to take him home, Keep him in a shoebox under my bed for when I needed Someone to talk to. A warm organ beating away beneath me as I slept. We searched the creek as if something so holy
Could share a bed there with the fish
Milky-eyed and blind. Where our fingers met
Amongst the mud and the weeds
And all the dirty forgotten things.
We searched the woods. We peered under logs.
Slow and nervous as with a new lover.
We shone a flashlight down, down into the well, Our foreheads converging wordlessly over that dark chasm. Holding our breath. Waiting for our hearts to hit the water. One second…two…three….
We racked our brains for new possibilities. We got creative. We grew desperate.
We dug holes in her father’s carefully manicured lawn
Only to come up empty and covered in ant bites. No – not empty. Her scarecrow smile gave her away. All teeth and no caution.
She grew flushed, I grew quiet like a fly wrapped in silk. The fire ants turned to scorch marks under our magnifying glass. Our own miniature reckoning.
Dusk crept up on us,
The shoebox discarded, abandoned in the grass. But that night as I lay in bed turning over, over in that smile. A familiar rhythm worked its way into my dreams.
When do I ever think of clouds?
Under thunder-bashed skies
Or over fields plucked and ploughed
When the rain crackles in the solemn tenor of the night
As they grieve aloud
When the day is dumbed to darkness
They are the breastplate of the sun
And they ride the sky at dawn
Amassed in a ton
They’ve shadowed great wars
And have seen the land below disfigured
The pangs of the Earth
As it longed to be transfigured
They’ve soured buildings with their acidic touch
Sponge fillings wrung of their excess baggage
Yet infant seeds are blessed
As it rains down in fruitfulness
As they appease their damage
They shape the imagination of young minds
Do they look like a dog or a kite?
Amorphous and ill-defined
They are drawn onto paper
With disregard for their size or height
When do I ever think of clouds?
When I find myself asking why
Why things are the way they are
As the world walks on by
Yarema Yakobchuk
A fond look back propels a trance
As Sir Scendental swerves
With his Renault he hit a cat, Alas, the world mews on.
Each morning wasted waking up, Each afternoon is soaked
In expectation of the builder’s tea
That gets him through it all
The red-headed receptionist
Litters his commute
With strange, grotesque depictions of almost human cats
And in the cubicle the sir
Is met with phantom itching,
As if the hair still lingers
The tea will get him through it all
Alas, the world mews on.
And yet, oh lo, a hill!
The dearest of protuberances
Like mountains, ergonomically
Comparing man to ant
While faux idiosyncrasies
Just push him further outward
And not even the tea
Will get him in the end
The world does not mew on,
For it is not a cat, scratch that, In fact, the world holds onto all
Who take a step on it, instead
Of crying for its gobbling nature
Take a step right off the edge, get rid of any trivial meaning…
…Glirble-Shmlargled Kitter-Cat.
I said there’s only one way to go now, keep your eyes shut. The sky is fragmenting, stiller than ever in the static. I said picture me and frame the picture. The scattered outlines of daffodils around our hands. I said stop trying to turn your sorrows into gardens. Stop asking where we’re going, find the window and follow the clouds. Your ear pressed to the pavement, too slow. Always missing exactly what you need to hear. Prettiness without autonomy. You’re prettier a year ago, thinking without a head. Then the car door opened and light blessed the undesirable. He sat in penance but forgot the motions of mouth. A dead girl, near-expiration boy. Hambone, short for Hamlet, but we aren’t good at making things easy now, are we? His hair rained right through the suncatchers. Corks, ladybugs of late fall, dried-up worms hugging the street. The plane’s going down now, but hold on. At least the clouds.
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Established in 1998, the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award is The Poetry Society’s flagship education programme. In 2024, we received over 17,000 poems from over 6,600 poets from 113 countries. The competition’s scale and global reach shows what a huge achievement it is to be selected a winner. Every year, 100 winners are chosen by esteemed poets who are passionate about discovering new voices. Winners receive a range of brilliant prizes, including a selection of poetry books donated by our generous supporters, and talent development support, such as mentoring, performance and publication opportunities, throughout their careers.
Alongside the competition, the award supports poetry in schools. Free teaching resources, including the winners’ anthologies, are distributed to schools worldwide, and The Poetry Society arranges poet-led workshops in culturally under-served areas of the UK. Each year, we celebrate ‘Teacher Trailblazers’: individuals who have shown outstanding commitment to poetry in the classroom. In 2025, we are delighted to work with Margaret Vos from Darrick Wood School, Kent and Gavin Husband from Dronfield Henry Fanshawe School, Derbyshire to share their enthusiasm for poetry with the wider teaching community.
The award has kick-started the careers of many well-known poets. Former winners regularly go on to publish full poetry collections and are often recognised in significant national competitions for adults. We are confident that the most recent winners will reach similarly dizzying heights, and we look forward to discovering yet more fantastic young poets in years to come. If you’re a young writer, enter the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award 2025 and you could follow in the footsteps of some of the most successful poets writing today.
Young Poets Network is The Poetry Society’s online platform for young poets worldwide up to the age of 25. It’s for everyone interested in poets and poetry – whether you’ve just started out, or you’re a seasoned reader and writer. You’ll find features, challenges and competitions to inspire your own writing, as well as new writing from young poets, and advice and guidance from the rising and established stars of the poetry scene. Young Poets Network also offers a list of competitions, magazines and writing groups which particularly welcome young writers.
In the past year, our writing challenges have invited young poets to reinvent myths, think about the link between sound and nature, use tools including rhyme, metre and stanzas, imagine a better world through poetry, and draw inspiration from food, the ocean, and the world of cinema. We’ve also published articles including insights from previous Foyle winners on how they wrote their poems and a playlist of poems by LGBTQ+ poets for Pride month, as well as how-to features on editing poetry, doing a freewrite and starting a poetry club at school. Young Poets Network also partnered with the T.S. Eliot Foundation to run the Young Critics Scheme, offering ten emerging poetry reviewers the chance to develop new skills around reviewing and share their thoughts on the T.S. Eliot Prize shortlist.
For updates about poets, poetry, competitions, events and more, like us on Facebook and follow us on Bluesky, Tiktok and X, @youngpoetsnet and Instagram @thepoetrysociety
Join the Young Poets Network mailing list to be part of this vibrant community of poets and continue your poetry journey. Sign up by visiting ypn.poetrysociety.org.uk
Download free poetry teaching resources, lesson plans and activities on our resources site, Poetryclass. Covering all ages and exploring many themes and forms of poetry, each resource has been created by our team of expert poet-educators and teachers. resources.poetrysociety.org.uk
Book a poet to visit your school through our Poets in Schools service. Poets can deliver one-off workshops, long-term residencies, INSET sessions for staff, and poet-led assemblies. Online and in-person options available. poetrysociety.org.uk/education
School Membership connects your school with all that poetry has to offer. School members receive books, resources, posters, Poetry News and The Poetry Review (secondary only), as well as discounted access to our Poets in Schools service. poetrysociety.org.uk/membership
Cloud Chamber is an online network for poets and teachers delivering poetry in the classroom to come together and discuss ideas, experiences and best practice. Meeting regularly on Zoom, each session considers a different theme. A presentation by an experienced poet-educator is followed by discussion time, and an accompanying resource is circulated afterwards. It is free to attend and is open to anyone with an interest in poetry in the classroom. Find out more at bit.ly/CloudChamberPoetry
Sign up to our schools e-bulletin by emailing educationadmin@ poetrysociety.org.uk
You can also follow The Poetry Society on X and Bluesky @PoetrySociety, and on Facebook and Instagram @thepoetrysociety
The Poetry Society is deeply grateful for the generous funding and commitment of the Foyle Foundation, and to Arts Council England for its ongoing support: together they have enabled us to grow the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award into one of the world’s most prestigious writing competitions for young people. In 2024, we are also indebted to the Thistle Trust, which has supported talent development for former winners, and to Sue Dymoke for the legacy which allows us to build on our work with teachers.
Thank you to 2024’s judges, Vanessa Kisuule and Jack Underwood, for their time, passion and support for the competition and The Poetry Society. Thanks also to the dedicated team of poets who helped the judging process: Aliyah Begum, Helen Bowell, Ella Duffy, Keith Jarrett, Rachel Long, Maureen Onwunali and Joshua Seigal.
Thanks to The British Library for providing a venue for this year’s awards ceremony. We thank Bad Betty, Candlestick Press, the Emma Press, Faber, ignitionpress, Macmillan, Out-Spoken press, tall-lighthouse, Forward Arts Foundation, Carcanet, Poems on the Underground and Divine for providing winners’ prizes. Thanks to Arvon for hosting the Foyle Young Poets’ residencies.
Our thanks go to Marcus Stanton Communications for raising awareness of the award, and to James Brown for designing the Foyle Young Poets anthology artwork. Thank you to our network of educators and poets across the UK for helping us to inspire so many young writers.
Finally, we applaud the enthusiasm and dedication of the young people and teachers who make the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award the great success it is today. foyleyoungpoets.org
Aged 11–17? Enter the competition by 31 July 2025 Judges: Colette Bryce and Will Harris
Enter your poems – change your life! The Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award 2025 is open to any writer aged 11 to 17 (inclusive) until the closing date of 31 July 2025. Poems can be on any theme and must be no longer than 40 lines. The competition is completely free to enter.
Prizes include poetry books, mentoring and the chance to develop your talent through publication, performances and writing opportunities. If you are selected as a winner, you will join a vibrant community of young poets. The award has shaped the careers of many well-known poets writing today.
How to enter: please read the updated competition rules, published in full at foyleyoungpoets.org. You can send us your poems online through our website, or by post. If you are aged 11–12 you will need permission from a parent or guardian to enter. You can enter more than one poem, but please concentrate on drafting and redrafting your poems – quality is more important than quantity. Entries cannot be returned so please keep copies. For more information, visit foyleyoungpoets.org
School entries: teachers can enter sets of poems by post or online. Head to foyleyoungpoets.org for instructions and to download the submission form. Every school that enters 25 students or more will receive a £50 discount on our Poets in Schools service. Want a FREE set of anthologies, resources and posters for your class? Email your name, address and request to fyp@poetrysociety.org.uk
Find out more and enter online for free at foyleyoungpoets.org. Remember, you must be aged 11–17 years on the closing date of 31 July 2025. Good luck – we can’t wait to read your poems!
‘Amongst these young poets are the future stars of the poetry world.’
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Vanessa Kisuule Judge of the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award 2024