Ted hughes festival foxy mex poetry anthology online edition

Page 1

FOXY MEX FREE OR DONATION SPECIAL EDITION

Ted Hughes

Poetry

Festival Anthology

2016


“You are who you choose to be.” Ted Hughes - The Iron Man


Find your way around the

FOXY MEX

Ted Hughes Poetry Festival Anthology 2016 6

- What's It Like To Be A Poet From Mexborough?

7

- Selected Poems for the Don & Dearne VOICES OF THE VALLEY

36 - The Ted Hughes Trail

IAN PARKS

MAP

39 - The Next Generation DONCASTER'S YOUNG POETS

www.tedhughesproject.org Design:

WARREN DRAPER

Artistic Direction: Photography:

RACHEL HORNE

DOMINIC SOMERS

With Special Thanks To: PAUL DYSON

LESLEY MERRIN IAN PARKS

MEXBOROUGH ACADEMY XP SCHOOL

horne&draper Everyday Audacity.

Right Up Our Street is led by a consortium of Doncaster arts organisations and supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England until 2016. Published by horne&draper art - design - publishing www.horneanddraper.com Printed by Buxton Press, Palace Rd, Buxton SK17 6AE



In the print version of this book we ran out of space to include all of the wonderful poems offered for publication in the Selected Poems for the Don & Dearne section of the anthology (page 6) by Ian Parks & Paul Dyson. Ultimately we decided which poems to include based purely on the length of the poems submitted. The longest poems were excluded from the printed edition. To redress he balance we have increased the page number of the online edition to include all of the poems originally submitted for publication. We are also delighted to be able to include a wider selection of poems from the regions amazing child poets.


What's It Like To Be A Poet From MEXBOROUGH?

That’s a question I often get asked. I’ve

fields and woods that surrounded it; and

always wanted to be a poet and my

a wooded valley with a river running

Mexborough roots are deep. I was born

through it remains the inner landscape of

in the front room of the house I now live

my dreams. To get from the town to the

in – a stone-fronted terraced house on

countryside you had to use the ferry over

the main road through town that used to

the Don and one of my earliest memories is

serve as the registry of births and deaths.

of being pulled across the river to the other

I often think of the Mexborough people

side. As I grew up that journey became

who passed through it to register births,

symbolic, passing not only from town to

marriages, and the deaths of men killed in

country but also from control to freedom,

pit accidents. There was no poetry in my

from prose to poetry.

family. As far back as anyone can remember

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all the male members on both sides of my

There were no poetry books – or books

family were miners. Mexborough was

of any kind in our house. For that I had

defined by mining and, to some extent, still

to use the Carnegie Library which was,

is. Although the town was predominantly

in its own way, a place of escape. But

industrial when I was growing up, all I

before I read poetry on the page I was

had to do was to lift my eyes to see the

exposed to it through the ear. My father


had learned reams of poetry by heart at

Age Battle of the Ings was fought on

school and he used to recite it when he

the meadows just down from where I

was getting ready to go out for a pint. In

lived. The first poem I wrote, Gargoyles in

that way I was introduced to some of the

Winter, was produced in response to the

greatest poems in the language – Shelley,

grotesque stone carvings around the tower

Wordsworth, Tennyson, Keats - by hearing

of Mexborough church. From an early age I

rather than seeing them. As well as being

was aware that the place where I lived had

a miner my father was also a singer and I

a rich and textured past, a past that was

used accompany him to the working men’s

very much alive in the present. Looking

clubs where he’d sit me at a table with a

back, I think the presence of the railway

lemonade and a bag of crisps while he

had something to do with me becoming

sang his way through the Great American

poet. The main line ran just past our house

Songbook. Those songs by the likes of

and I used to lie awake listening as the

Johnny Mercer and Cole porter went into

trains rattled off to destinations east and

the mix too.

west. That opened up the possibility of

Then there was the history. Beyond the recent past, back in the mists, I was

elsewhere, so important to the imagination and to poetry too.

intrigued by the fact that the huge Dark Illustration by Alan Heighton

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I lived in my imagination - a rich inner life

disappeared. But the vitality of the people,

fed by the sights and sounds of the town

the relish for language, the landscape of my

around me, the people of Mexborough

childhood, and the invisible connections

and the broadness of their vowels. Coal

to the past are still there. The trains still

arrived on the doorstep by the ton and

criss-cross my dreams and the poems,

women in scarves still scoured their

inexplicably, keep coming.

windowsills. I went to Mexborough School and soon became aware that Ted Hughes had attended too. At the time I was more interested another poet who had been a pupil there, Harold Massingham, who had been born in Herbet Street and whose father was a also a miner. I read his poem, Black Bull Guarding Apples over and over and developed a strong connection that I was never to feel for Hughes. The importance to me was that two poets – and two excellent poets at that – had attended the same school, walked the same streets, and made the fabled crossing over the ferry.

I think, on reflection, it’s fair to say that Mexborough made me the poet that I am. After living a lifetime in different places all over the country, circumstances have brought me back to live in Mexborough. Much has changed. The Miner’s Strike of the mid-1980’s proved to be a dividing line between the past and present, and the community I grew up in has all but

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IAN PARKS Poet and Mexborough born and bred.


Selected Poems for the DON & DEARNE

A small selection of poems from a collection originally edited by Ian Parks & Paul Dyson. We believe that they stand as a testament to the inspiration & talent which can be found in and around one of England's most beautiful forgotten valleys. Our only regret is that we did not have room for Ian & Paul's full collection.

10 - A Long Line Of Churches 11 - Reflection

SALLY JENKINSON

LYNNE LINDSAY

12 - Beyond Words

JOHN CLARK

13 - Meet Everybody Fight & Die 14 - Whose Hughes? 15 - Nuts

MICK PETTINGER

SHEILA KINGHAM

JOHN BEAL

16 - Past Brodsworth (for Terry Chip) 17 - Return 18 - Here

MICK JENKINSON

DAN RYDER

JO HARRIS

19 - Remembrance FRANK COLLEY 20 - The Room HELEN McCABE 21 - Perception Of Motion

TONY NOON

22 - Springtime Skylark LORIEN WENTWORTH-HOUGHTON 23 - A Seriousness Of Blue Tits 24 - Beesands

SHEILA NORTH

MICHÉLE BECK

26 - Hiroshima & Nagasaki 28 - Illicit Love

BARRY GRIFFITHS

LESLEY MERRIN

30 - Writing The Song Of It (for Barry Hines) RAY HEARNE 33 - Untitled (I'm trying to get the title)

ROB EMIN


A Long Line Of CHURCHES

The woods are never quiet. Sometimes after dark, they may seem to have taken their last sleeping draught of air before sinking into the deep and hush of sleep – but soon, they shudder themselves awake.

These trees, a night watch keepers and curators of the wet earth. That ridge was an old Devon hedge. This here was fields before, and forest again before that. Nothing is so ancient or auspicious as the ground that grew it, not trees or henges or shopping centres or our own selves. And as the morning light tilts in, making eaves and cloisters of the high branches – you can easily see that all these beams, this lovely canopy, is just the latest in a long line of churches built on sacred ground to capture her glow and wonder. A holy show of just what she can do, whenever the moods takes her.

SALLY JENKINSON

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REFLECTION

NOITCELFER

I’ll take a look — you should too! We together would see two faces real and true. One with no expression — other than ‘dead’! The other full of despair and troubled dread. Our future what will it hold? Our lives together — will our plans ever unfold? But ‘no’ they are put to the ‘halt’! Is it that it is all your fault? ‘No’ Stop! — I must not think that way. My man is not wanting in this life to stay. Not wanting to see our ambitions through Our plans seem shattered, what will we do? I need to be strong, To comfort and support. Never in my life such a difficult thought! ‘For better, for worse, in sickness and in health, I just never imagined all of this for myself. All this mental pain I cannot touch Oh my God, I love you so much …

LYNNE LINDSAY

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BEYOND WORDS It’s not all doom and gloom you know? The world goes on, on with this show. This mask, this front that we display, Despite inside feeling dismay. Those niggles trample any strength, That we’ll avoid at any length. Avoid the mire, blend in with herds, Moments like this are beyond words.

These observations, what they’ll bring.

Society’s a boggling mess,

Is perhaps sense to try and change,

That’s how it’s perceived, still this stress,

‘Stead of giving up at this stage.

Its aches and pains, the extreme views,

Accusations, condemnation,

Horseshoe effect, its weight sinews.

Bogged down in this degradation.

Post-Industrial Smog afoot,

And reassurance lost in turn,

Dreams trampled by steel-toe-capped boots.

Moments like this are beyond words.

Journalism still sways and swerves.

Beyond words, beyond these words, hope,

Moments like this are beyond words.

A word for us to use to cope.

Loose rhymes, loose couplets describing,

Try and balance, moderation, Positives, negatives, grating, Grating, taking hold of your head, Sometimes better shown than said, Try to stay calm, stay strong, be heard, You need to be seen, beyond words.

JOHN CLARK

12


Meet Everybody FIGHT&DIE

We blame each other fight

Meet everybody.

and die. Can’t we let sleeping dogs lie.

Shake their hand. We didn’t choose the surroundings If ya don’t like ‘em leave ‘em.

that guided our insides to war,

If ya do,

about theft,

show ‘em

stolen for hunger.

and they might just return the favor

We paint this picture

by making your life interesting.

and face away from the pain,

by laughing and smiling with you for time.

the suffering and decay. It’s time to celebrate and collaborate.

Orgasmic, fantastic, platonic love. There int nowt wrong wi it.

To save the people we hate,

Try.

to save the people we blame and to save ourselves in this wake.

Your mates struggling to get through the day. Many different problems and heart aches to

To create and unslave.

face.

To learn, invent and educate.

Because it’s torturous to live

So meet everybody,

in a world where you have to pay

shake their hand.

to breath, to eat,

Or fight and die.

to have some where to sleep. MICK PETTINGER

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WHOSE HUGHES? Stalking royally round the corridors, Tossing back the shiny black lock of hair – Tribute to an inspiring teacherAdored by hopeful fifth-form girls But conscious of your superiority, Even then your writing was strong, Earthy, compelling, (Though I did turn one of your poems down For the School Magazine.) Always you saw clearly to the bone And knew the exact word to expose the truth. Sometimes death was with you. We followed your works and, with the rest of the world, Honoured and admired you, proud To be part of the same heritage. Rightly were you acclaimed Poet Laureate. Not bad for a lad from Mexborough!

SHEILA KINGHAM

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NUTS Andy defending orchard, white stallion snorting restless. Over stile, crossing by water butt down through gnarled and twisted boughs.

Promise of river beyond hedge By quiet stream, silken grass path,

Sudden movement and nut thrust away.

and hazel, veined, rounded leaf.

I sheltering ‘neath canopy became target

There ‘neath canopy, resting silent,

for this little man’s amusing war

russet little man, hands praying

as, bouncing from bough to twig, criss-crossing

holding golden, glorious nut.

empty space a shower of nuts came scurrying down, down from well-aimed hand.

Old man tufted ears, and upright,

Inside the laughter welled,

bushy tail, sprung ever to attention.

And cheeky chirrup escaped tender lips;

Alert, a warning waft, gentle as spring,

whiskers flexing in seeming mirth.

eye warily watching my progress. And eye to eye we met —

This hedgerow dandy,

glorious figure; red back, legs arms

gave best his worth,

and hands, fingers softly, tenderly

to disappear cross further bough;

caressing hazel shell, gently tap.

and one last flick of tail was gone.

JOHN BEAL

15


PAST BRODSWORTH (for Terry Chip) It starts with a tightening of the throat

This is where it began

Prickling of the skin of my scalp

Where they paused and they observed

And the hairs tangibly on end

The crossing of the river and the lie of the

Along the back of my arms and neck

land

I am re-living with sensory overload

And they put down tentative roots

My Gran tugging at my coat

Fashioned shelter and protection

Pulling me against the wind

Brought their children, gods and animals

Along the Roman Ridge

Into this valley That we now call home

Before the railways marked the land Before the mines reconstructed our domain

I must have looked so very confused

Go back and back as far as you dare

But she was patient and persistent

To see what then was there

“Look out past Brodsworth towards those

Through famine, plague and flood

moors

Through affluence and plenty

Along the lines of those trees

Incursion and invasion

The ebb and swell of that ancient terrain

The slow collecting together of what we are

You will see traces and remains of what made us In the light down the valley, the air above the fields And the prints of your shoes�

MICK JENKINSON

16


RETURN

There are silences between stops, albeit short ones

& as strangers depart from ill-lit carriages

they swallow the scent of home & smile.

DAN RYDER

17


HERE Perfectly mown lawns bringing a satisfying feeling of ease, But never quite reaching that pure peace I crave. Just when I feel I can almost touch it, It is shattered by that constant, regular flow Of people from very land you can imagine, Pointing, laughing, chattering, shouting.

Remember the daisies and the bold, shameless weeds, Poking their heads through the trodden scuffed ground, Daring to violate that beautiful, near-perfect world Of the immaculate hedge cut to geometric proportions, Not a leaf out of place, here where the cameras click, The children play and the joggers bounce by. Here I am not at peace.

No, my peace comes from elsewhere, where the grass grows freely, Where the daisies dance in the warm gentle breeze And where the roses dare to look, everyone just as different from the last. Even the songs of the birds seem happier here As if they too feel they are truly at peace Here, where the footsteps of the people are almost silent Everyone sits, unspeaking, thinking, here I am at peace.

JO HARRIS

18


REMEMBRANCE I remember you I see your face Every time I close my eyes I don’t know your name Or anything about you All I know is your face I saw it down my barrel Then you fell It was you or me If it was the other way around Would you remember me Remember my face Whenever you close your eyes Is it tattooed inside your eyelids

FRANK COLLEY

19


THE ROOM

Victoria winks at the doxies and the angel turns her head to look away The war hero loosens from attention at the realization that his tomorrow's our yesterday St Pancras oozes thick black smoke with the stench of oil in steam And it wafts under the noses of a past generations king and queen If only we all could possess that gift he gave us, and all be just what is known Oh the memories reflected in those mirrors, which made this house a home Captured snapshots of my family, then here I will never be alone

HELEN McCABE

20


PERCEPTION OF MOTION It is not the float or the prospect of pike.

It is not the flag or the passage of wind.

The content rich space between watcher and watched is the fertile sea.

Ideas buzz here.

Flies over summer water above our line of thought.

Sucked into minds distracted by a perception of motion.

TONY NOON

21


SPRINGTIME SKYLARK The first skylark of spring,

Let us see little birds

Tethered by invisible string,

Dart in and out and whisper words

Whistles his tune full blast

As they go to their nests,

To welcome in the season’s gods,

Again and again, feeding young,

Present and past,

Without much rest.

To gently show away

Wake the flowering trees.

Winter’s clouds ‘til another day.

Let me hear the hum of the bees

For now the sun will shine

As they visit each one

And slowly warm the air and earth

And every little flower.

Until next time.

Spring can’t be long.

Push away those rain clouds.

Skylark, please sing your song.

Let us see that pale blue sky now.

Wake those gods, sing loudly and strong

Feel sun on our skin

Make them hear your sweet plea.

And let the first sounds of springtime

And make them turn the season’s cogs,

Warm us within.

So spring, we see.

Wake the naked hedgerows. Let their tangled veins soon be clothed With flower buds and shoots, As the sap, their lifeblood, rises Up from their roots.

LORIEN WENTWORTH-HOUGHTON

22


g.

A Seriousness of BLUE TITS If a group of crows is a murder, this is what you are.

Babies no bigger than a young child’s toe peck earnestly at Wilkinson’s best fatballs.

If birds had brows, yours would be furrowed.

I focus as you delicately feast, sometimes three to one: you cling

with the most ridiculous of legs and feet, eat, sidestep air, and are gone.

SHEILA NORTH

23


BEESANDS

Rape-seed inhaled with every inward breath, gold dust radiates telling of springtime’s untimely death, branches twist in the suns silhouette, perfectly framed in the blazing, nectarine sunset. A pastoral turquoise and teal cloak, disturbed as foals escapade, racing for the shore. Radiant sea diamonds encrusted in their eyes, disintegrating into the sand, evaporating to be no more. The razor blade edges, caressed by the ebb of the ocean. Gods watchers dance in the amethyst night. Ships glide the tepid waters of summer - guided by a beaming prism of light.

MICHÉLE BECK

24


Hiroshima & NAGASAKI It was the year and the month that I was conceived Tens of thousands of families were bereaved White balls of fire erupted in the sky A hundred thousand perished and were left to die. Death on a Biblical scale, Armageddon, the Apocalypse: In the epicentre of Hiroshima, Everyone was a corpse.

A revelation of death, destruction, And the end of civilisation. Thousands were left with The hereditary effects of leukaemia and radiation. The aftermath was charred detritus, Bodies covered in blood. Women’s bodies, whose skin hung from them like a kimono, Plunged shrieking into the river’s flood.

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Dropped from the sky at 8.15 am, On August 6th 1945 A four and half ton uranium bomb Named ‘Little Boy’ became live. Released from an aircraft, A B29 named the ‘Enola Gay’. It could have been a game on a computer to play, Instead it exterminated humanity On this fateful day.

Two days later a plutonium bomb was dropped on Nagasaki city, Vaporising half the population: There was no pity. A crime had been committed, Morality had been omitted. A vast mushroom cloud appeared in the sky, Nagasaki boiled as thousands of the population did die, The Bible says ‘Let’s sit on the banks Of the River Babylon and shed tears’ For this fearful happening, seventy years ago.

BARRY GRIFFITHS

26


ILLICIT LOVE Leaving, I write notes of passion hiding them in his socks, under his pillow, in his favourite jacket pocket.

I smudge lipstick letters in red on the mirror, intimate, sensual missives only he’ll understand. When he returns, he smiles, feels the warmth, a connection, feeling safe and loved, until we can meet again

But not this time.

Sitting motionless in the carriage watching the dull day pass by hiding from onlookers tears roll down my face. This love was a guest uninvited but I could not resist.

My soul is lost and troubled I’m walking through a raging storm The pain is physical it hurts like nothing else. Distraught, my heart bursts open the wound bleeds afresh This time I left only one note.

27


He’ll return and see it written on scented paper the expectation will be there, he’ll think of me, the warmth and love I give, he’ll feel the connection until he reads it. His face with crumple with the shadow of grief the smile erased.

It says ‘It’s over.’

Writing the note, I felt relief guilty, no more. Waiting for calls which didn’t come, no more. Betraying another woman, no more. A woman who loves him like I do.

28


I tell myself ‘the pain will subside, every day I will get stronger.’ As my train nears my destination so does the end. The pain increases, the doubt increases. How can I live my life without him?

Each mile nearer my resolve falters, panic installs itself in my psyche. I’ll phone him, tell him it was a mistake, that I’ve changed my mind, had time to think it over, Warn him before he reads the letter, He’ll laugh, when I tell him it was a joke.

I phone him, he answers. He says ‘It’s over’.

LESLEY MERRIN

29


WRITING THE SONG OF IT (For Barry Hines) Via Heaney, Hughes and Harrison, Yeats and Joyce I circumnavigate my muse’s voice

Like Barry Hines transposing Oscar Wilde I reconcile what won’t be reconciled

My dad used to sing all the time around the house Countless songs of promiscuous pedigree Hymns and ballads, Caruso, Lanza, Locke Big-throated tenors with saucy reputations McCormac, Robeson, then t’ Clancy brothers, Tommy Makem, t’ Dubliners, t’ Wolf Tones, Christy Moore

Tongues warbling forever in my ears, my bones

Only in my later teens would pennies drop A falling away of scales from stony eyes Courtesy of rock and roll, and pop T’ McGarrigles, Dostoyevsky, James and Joni

That every bit of music, note and word Augmenting phrase, consummative syllable

30


Was coaxed, cajoled and wheedled into being By some poor magical innocent like me

No god, no pope, no henry the syphilitic No otherworldly genius, clerk of Oxbridge Oracle or shepherd; some lass or lad Only, some human being, with mucky hands Perhaps, and accent, like mine and those around me

Listeners and learners, if lazier often than good

So many Billies thwarted by some Jud

Apprentices, by pattern and paradigm To temperaments of worked craftworthiness

Donkeying mundane byways across the reliable

Diagonals over tired old expectations

Distillers of the commonplace’s ichor Into the beautiful and intricate Melodies borrowed, tailed and topped, absorbed Re-used, re-vitalised from age to age

31


Alchemical stories’ golden re-tellings; stories Of love and laughter, lamenting, emigration Hunger, anger, yearning, yearning, yearning

The dark well of my own life and history Brimming with at least two buckets full

My Yorkshire words and tongue, my Irish airs A tuning fork between whose prongs I’ve dithered

Desperate for harmonies, surfing the hum Of my own echo’s resonant continuum

Those pulsing waves, unstoppable choruses Of affirmation oozing the song of UZ

That’s what drives me, outing that inward schism’s Undiminishing rhythm, making it rhyme

I circumnavigate my muse’s voice Via Heaney, Hughes and Harrison, Yeats and Joyce

Like Barry Hines transposing Oscar Wilde I’ll reconcile what won’t be reconciled

RAY HEARNE

32


UNTITLED (I'm Still Trying To Get The Title) The cats are around, In perfect surround sound Howling and bawling, Hissing, caterwauling Amplified yelling and magnified yawls Echoing off of the silent brick walls

Then distant dogs, woken up from their sleep in dismay Disappointedly discovering masters away Belching barks to the sky More barks in reply Yodelling and yowling Dog-coughing and growling Wailing and weeping Losing interest and sleeping

Then the blackbird, the robin, the thrush and the wren Breaking the silence once again Singing and laughing Chirping and chaffingÂ

And insects arise Wasps, bees, crickets and flies Buzzing and clicking And droning and ticking

33


And larger things disturbing leaves and the grass, Belch and rustle, rummage, snuffle and snort as they pass Sniffing here, sniffing there sniffing every which way Sniffing flesh, sniffing bone, sniffing damp and decay

And under the water, and under the soil Creatures bristle, beware, creatures trouble and toil The splash and the slither, the creak and the croak The dart, grab and swallow, the rattle, the choke

Now the cars rust and rot. Beetles spiders, cockroaches Roads buckle and crack, vegetation encroaches Livestock runs wild, structures crumble and fall And no-one passes comment. There’s no-one at all.

ROB EMIN

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Find out more about the TED HUGHES TRAIL at www.t ed hu g he s pro je c t. o r g

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The Next Generation DONCASTER'S YOUNG POETS As you can imagine, the poetry of Ted Hughes has influenced education throughout Doncaster. Here we offer an all too brief selection of poems from the children of Mexborough Academy and Doncaster's ground-breaking XP School. With an average age of just 12 years old, we think you'll agree that the future of poetry in Doncaster is in safe hands.

XP SCHOOL 40 - Sunrise EMILY PONCIA 42 - Fading Light 43 - The Waves 44 - Haunted 46 - Wolf

TOBY WILLIAMSON

AZRIEL CHAN

KELSEA ROPER

BEN SMITH

48 - Storm

ZARA YAMANI

MEXBOROUGH ACADEMY 50 - Below The River

CONNOR McKEE

51 - Night On The River 52 - The Silver Sun

JOHANNA BECERRA

53 - The Magic Moon 54 - The Dull Moon

BROOK FOSTER

CERYS OGLEY

LUCY JOHNSON


SUNRISE A looming emptiness hung in the sky, As darkness consumed even the vastness of oceans, abyssal and unfathomable, concealed with a lurking darkness,

The ominous charcoal clouds were on the Brink of consuming the land’s entirety. A soft amber glow began to flicker, Forcing darkness to slowly creep away in a silent retreat,

Spreading into the desolate sea. The fiery glow danced around the sky, Leaving its delicate primrose and vermilion footprints. The sun emerged from its hiding, creating a beacon of hazy light.

A luminous explosion of colours broke through the bleak sky, Creating columns of blinding light, Exiling the darkness of the heavy sky.

It was as if a volcano had erupted in the sky, Camouflaging it in molten red and fiery Yellow, Dispelling the ash like clouds.

40


The sublime sight devoured the night, Cloaking the last dregs of darkness, In a wash of glowing colours, Creating a feeling of nostalgic serenity.

As the day began to emerge, So did the alluring creatures of the sea, A gust of life filled the sky, While all marine lifeforms timidly began to materialise.

Birds swooped down from the sky, Snapping at the craven fish, Who swam with their dazzling colours reflected off crystal blue water.

All at once a sense of tranquillity returned, The sun shone a pure yellow, The sea sparkled in a mystical fashion, And the world was at peace.

EMILY PONCIA

41


FADING LIGHT I crest the high hill In the fast-fading light,

Ancient trees Shade the ancient path.

Bird song on the air, Carried from afar

But now sinking Rapidly below the horizon.

In the silent dusk. And the sun:

Great streaks of colour Illuminate the sky:

Great ball of fire Hanging in the sky

Red, orange, yellow, Merging into darkness

Giver of all life, Vanquisher of darkness,

As the skyline consumes The mighty star.

Taken by the darkness, There to be chained for the night.

TOBY WILLIAMSON

42


THE WAVES They are the waves; frustrated, harming, fluctuating shadows, navigating the yawning, navy sea. The treacherous ocean, Tempered-cool, beguiles the night sky, whilst innocent, Ships are taken by the waves, lurking, liquid predators.

Their bodies’ envelop the world with a translucent blue, Yet, darker secrets are held within their deep, sapphire prisons. Ripped ships and sail boats, mangled corpses line the sand, Secrets forgotten, memories fragmented, finally, souls lost.

Not all is dark and mystifying; as the torch of the sky, Emerges above the horizon, the oblivions above transform: Vast mixes of colour, crimson and gold, layer the blue, The sun lighting a beacon, wielding light around and above.

At mid-day, aquatic creatures rise above and ride the waves, Dancing side-by-side. Beneath the waves’ expanse, Flush reds and greens, vibrant glows of moving colour, Fins and tails, gills and scales, crustaceans and more.

Forever bound, the waves are to the sea, puppets of the Great bodies of the sun and the moon. A part of nature, Destroyers of sailors, guardians of the sea. Lest we forget who they are; they are the waves.

AZRIEL CHAN

43


HAUNTED Silent. Except for the gushing of the river, Which sits below the hanging canopy. No sound. No movement. Nothing.

The silence unbearing. The stillness unnatural. The canopy shelter, To the now hidden creatures.

The wind whips the trees, Breaking the silence. Tearing the silence. The canopy explodes.

The toucan’s song, Illuminates. Creatures of blue and red, Are seen everywhere.

Up in the trees he sits. Alone. Watching the life below.. Fish leaping from the water.

44


He swoops down. The fish lifeless in his clutches, And life in the canopy splits. It falls to a dull, dark silence.

The red and blue is lost, The toucan’s song gone. An apex predator. Deadly as day, mysterious as night.

He is alone. As dark as white, As light as black. A mysterious creature.

The eagle. Haunts the canopy.

KELSEA ROPER

45


WOLF The sun glistens through the pinpoked tree canopy, Gracing our immaculate fur, the warm breeze sweeps our faces.

Our pelt, a flood of colour. An arrangement of the brightest yellows and the darkest browns.

The forest, vibrant and green, A sanctuary of life.

Our hunting ground. . A buffet of the weak.

We hunt together, as one, Running with the wind, a family.

Our acute eyes scour the area like a heatseeking radar, Scanning for an easy meal.

A helpless elk, Separated from the herd,

46


Instantly, we begin to surround our dumbfounded prey, As we stealthily but swiftly creep towards it.

Managing to only slightly tear the elegant animal, We chase through the undergrowth.

Dodging the vein-like tree roots, Our instinctive eyes focused on the target.

The smell of the wounded flesh fills our senses, Spurring us onwards.

The torn prey becomes sluggish, weak. Taking the opportunity, we attack with all our numbers. No mercy.

The decomposing corpse casts evil shadows in the thicket of the wood, Marking our dominance upon unforgiving forest.

As we howl under the moonlight.

BEN SMITH

47


STORM A churning sea awash with colour Each wave another work of art

Wicked amethyst black clouds Rolling over the blue black waves A great army prepares for war

The boat Dwarfed by the vast monstrosity of the ocean

Her hull cracking Cruelly mirroring the broken spirits of her crew

So close So close to sinking into the soft sands of the seabed The soft sands of death

And all the while the waves The waves! Unmerciless in their anger

Without warning The clouds are consumed by the endless sky Melting into the ether

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Revealing the cyan blue sea Once a ravaging beast of the night Now a tame creature of the day

The sky Merged with the water Painting a picture entirely in blue

The boat Breathes a gentle sigh Then retreats like a wounded soldier

Into the mist Into the eternal seas of time

ZARA YAMANI

49


Below The RIVER

I am swimming in the river The ducks ripple the water As they gracefully approach me The summer breeze slowly blows The reeds towards the water.

I am surrounded by wildlife as I dip my head below Underneath the river all life is dead Dead fish and rubbish all in sight

I cannot compare the beauty of the foliage above From the absence of life below My mind is blurred by the fascinating thought of the place Above to contemplate the sadness of below the river.

CONNOR McKEE

50


Night On THE RIVER It is night on the river, the static crystal clear river reflects the glistening moonlight, A fox lay on the bank his blank black eyes stared into the river as he moved closer to take a drink.

The once peaceful river rippled and came alive with wildlife Frogs rushed along bank, croaking, in a hurry, Small fish emerged from the river landing back in with a small plop, A badger rushed from the tall treeline beyond the bank Splashing into the river Using its hind legs to propel himself Through the cold water.

The rats come out from their holes Swiftly swimming to the other side. A chilling gust of wind rushed past, The fox looked up and the river was peaceful again It is night on the river,

BROOK FOSTER

51


THE SILVER SUN Up in the night sky Shining down and glistening high Glowing light upon the waters And fathers walking with their daughters

Like a sun with a silvery outer lining While the stars in the sky keep shining They’re jealous of your beauty But you just know you are doing your duty of lighting up the gloomy world like a great white, light-struck pearl.

Even though the bats screech You still remain to keep your peace It calms me when I am upset And it makes me happy when comes sunset.

As the orange light arrives on the horizon You’ll know your job is done ‘Goodbye, moon’ said I I’ll see you again when night is nigh.

JOHANNA BECERRA

52


THE MAGIC MOON

A dim light shine through the night, It’s the moon. The round ball of grey sand ceyGives the world light at night, His magic powers show as he changes shape Waxing and waning.

Reflecting in the sky is the sun Who turns to a ghost at dusk And sleeps while morning, Everyone dozes off as the magic moon hypnotises us The world’s asleep, the moon fades away for another day, As the sun rises it is back out to play.

CERYS OGLEY

53


The Dull MOON The moon never seems to shine bright Like the sun and twinkling stars With craters like bullet wounds Just waiting to be filled

The shining stars watch the lifeless moon Like a movie along with earth as an audience.

Every morning the moon will go back to hiding Now as the people of earth go back to their daily lives Looking for the sun to bring them light

But the moon will soon return Greeting the world with a family of stars

Waiting for the cycle to reappear again

LUCY JOHNSON

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Illustrations by Alan Heighton


horne&draper Everyday Audacity.

FOXY MEX ©2016


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