Wednesday 30 November 2011

Results of the Swale Life Poetry Competition (November 2011)

We are pleased to announce the results of the Swale Life Poetry Competition (November 2011) as judged by Geoff Stevens.

There are 7 commended in no particular order:

K. Woodrow – ‘Graffiti Artist, 37, seeks symbol with gsoh

Adrian Bushen – Schubertiad

Michael Newman – Sunrise at Wainlode

Michael Newman – In the Key of Regret

Michael Newman – News from Wales

C.J. Korta – A Dorset Couple

Garden Pests – Flick Spear

The Highly Commended Poems which win prizes of £10 each are:

Roger Elkin – Sun Street, Shelton

Troy Elliot – Hurricane Rita

The winner of the Third Prize of £30.00 is Bruce Harris - Commuter Computer

The Second Prize of £50.00 goes to Christian Ward – Scafell

And the First Prize of £100.00 goes to Noelle Janaczewska – Once upon a Tiger

These 12 poems, together with the winners and commended poems from the previous 3 Swale Life International Poetry Competitions held in 2011 will be included in the anthology to be published in December.

Friday 18 November 2011

Results of The TRYangle Project Poetry Competition 2011

Let me begin by expressing the gratitude of all of us at Excel for Charity to the poets from across the world who entered this competition in aid of The TRYangle Project. It was indeed heartwarming to have received 153 poems which raised £143.50 for the charity. A small drop in the ocean of what they need to combat the evil of domestic violence, but surely the cash raised will do something for them, and I cannot thank the poets enough for writing to help.

Great thanks to Gabriel Griffin for a good job done, and for such a lovely and detailed report on the competition which can be read here.

Congratulations to the Highly Commended poets; Anne Ballard for 'Secret' and Pat Borthwick for 'Their Door', third prize winner Simon Jackson for 'Punchbag', second prize winner Desmond Kon Zhicheng Mingdé for 'Inside David's Labyrinth' and our overall winner, Sheffield poet, Jenny Donnison for 'Apology.' Talking of apology, you will notice that the poem is presently differently from the other poems. This has been necessitated by a desire to maintain the poem's layout.

Nnorom Azuonye
Administrator.

Judge's Report, The TRYangle Project Poetry Competition 2011


I usually enjoy judging poetry competitions immensely – but not this one. The theme was domestic violence and the 150 odd poems entered were all, of course, on this distressing theme. It was hard to read them, I had to read in shifts. It was impossible not to empathize with all the writers, many of whom I guessed wrote from personal experience and were not accustomed to writing poems, yet desperately needed to express the horror of their experiences, to give voice at last. The great majority of poems entered were those that described (very vividly) the violence inflicted upon women by their husbands or male companions. Rare were the poems that spoke of women battering men. Several (not as many as I would have expected) related to incest and child abuse.

Through all these poems ran coloured threads: purple, violet, blue, red and black; the colours of the bruises and wounds inflicted physically on the victims – we can only guess at the immense psychological damage. There were a fair number of birds fluttering over some of these poems: birds trapped in cages, birds of paradise, a woodpecker and a handsome bird that pulps its prey. There was a tomcat, a rat, a fox and a wolf.

A handful of poems were from the point of view of an onlooker, a would-be helper relating the impossibility of assisting someone who dare make no move to help herself – in one the victim, a young woman, prefers to be “abused than unwanted, despised than alone”.

Occasionally the victim attempts to call for help, one dials “the three nines”. But when she is asked whether she needs fire, police, ambulance, or coastguard, she asks herself, uncertain, “was she burning or drowning?” and puts the phone down. Another victim asks her priest for help with a bipolar, violent husband but the priest just tells her “to offer up the pain”!

Most of the victims of male partner abuse have developed that devastating conviction that the violence is their own fault – in one the victim says “leave him? You must be joking, my fault, always provoking”. This is an attitude that the majority of battered women and children (according to these poems) assume and I find this extremely sad. A devastation that is both physical and psychological. It was a relief to read the words of one battered wife to her husband: “There is only one ceremony I wish for you/ and it has fuck all/ to do with forgiveness”. I wanted to cheer this woman.

But another woman who had the courage to denounce her violent husband and take him to court saw the abuser get off scot free because, according to the author, both he and the judge were freemasons. I find this example of ‘brotherhood’ very troubling.
Children in these poems are abused by neighbours, brothers, fathers. Babies are battered . A kid is forced to eat food he finds revolting. Onlookers hesitate to help. But some children can be extremely difficult and terrorize their parents , although I have a sneaking sympathy for the boy who carried on provoking his too-perfect, composed mother until she lost her temper with him at last, the boy finding her anger “the warmest thing/ to have passed between them” .

All the poems were extremely eloquent and stirred a strong emotional response in me. But at this point I had to put emotions aside and judge them not merely for their subject matter but as poetry. Almost all were written in free verse, sometimes rather too freely, perhaps the authors were overcome by the emotion and distress they were attempting to portray. There were two rather informal sonnets (I had expected more sonnets). A few entries were written in rhyming couplets or quatrains, the rhymes being often a little too obvious. There was a well written villanelle.

I put on the ‘No’ pile poems with clanging rhymes, those that used hackneyed phrases, those that slammed the message home, those that said what they had to say in a rather monotonous way with no image or turn of word to engage me. I looked for poems that intrigued me, that arrested my attention, that made me wonder, not just exclaim “Oh how terrible!” and turn to the next.

After much reading, re-reading and pauses for reflection, I had a final shortlist of ten poems. These poems were the ones that stayed in my mind and had me thinking of them while I was doing other things. They were very individual and different poems; there is the monologue of ‘Forgiveness’ in which the poet reassures her batterer over and over again that “it’s alright”, she accepts what’s happened and forgives him but ends “I’m not going to talk to you again./Nor anything else to you again”.

‘Crossword’s is rather unsettling: the mother trapping her adolescent son (I guess a son rather than a daughter) in the ritual of her crossword puzzle. The mother shows off her ability, cheats rather. As the boy grows older, he realizes “how many of the clues/were repeats from other weeks, /how the language used was simple and limited.” It ends with the boy catching up and overtaking the mother, all the time careful to keep between them “requisite blank spaces”.

‘Pomace’ has some memorable images, of Nona, the grandmother, in the kitchen sieving “the hush flour, dribbling the mummed oil”. In contrast with these peaceful domestic images is an undercurrent of contained violence, “the knives’ fangs” and “slicing the muscle of love”. The making of olive oil is used to express something we can guess happening to the young girl but that she won’t admit even to herself, nor will anyone else speak of it: the secrecy conveyed by the adjectives ‘hush’, ‘dumb’, ‘ mummed’.

‘Gnome Princess’ consists of two stanzas with many phrases of the first repeated in the second while assuming an opposite meaning. A little girl stands in the garden (I loved the phrase “All nithered and withered”) observed by a kindly neighbor who has no idea of the true nature of the child’s father – the daddy the girl is trying without hope to avoid. This poem invites us to ask ourselves how often do we fail to notice when something is dreadfully wrong with those near us, children especially, who haven’t the comprehension of their situation or the language to ask for help.

‘Dressed to kill’, a short, neat, vivid poem, describes a many-hued bird “posed/as if waiting at a hotel bar” that batters its prey to pulp. A charming analogy! Since the name of the bird isn’t mentioned and I was intrigued, I spent some time on the RSPB and similar sites before finally deciding (there are clues in the poem) that it might be a bee-eater.

Highly Commended: ‘Secret’. The form is a villanelle, well-worked, very visual. A father persuades his little girl to stay with him all day and a night in their secret place in the bracken: “We may spot a lark, like a speck in the sky/ till it snaps out of sight and the song drifts away” adding “No need to tell Mummy, for Mummy might cry/then bad men would come and take Daddy away”… the subject is, alas, all too clear.

Highly Commended: ‘Their Door’ is a spare, sad poem, the poet wanting to go back to the past and see “two beaming faces with a look of me/arms outstretched” but the door will not open and the poet remains outside in “this cold, endless night”.

Now for the three prize-winning poems: each one is very different in form and subject from the other two, but all three are extremely assured, each poet is obviously in full control. And says exactly what he or she wants to say in the best language, whether this be dialect, everyday speech or very elegant writing.

3rd prize: ‘Punchbag’ A short poem (16 lines) telling of a battered husband and father. It is written in dialect and describes the father as “shan, weak, pathetic/an empty shirt blown in the wind”. The child would join the mother in hurting the father both physically and with words, but the poem ends “It’s only now I ken/that accepting the jags and burling shoves, just as the need tae inflict them/ shows a girning kind of love”. A wonderfully descriptive and moving conclusion.

2nd prize goes to the extremely well-written, elegant ‘Inside David’s Labyrinth’.I was enchanted by this poem because it is mysterious, it doesn’t tell but alludes. The protagonist says he needed “this evening of gin and single malts/just to get these words on the page…”. Thirty-six lines and nine stanzas to recall a past of fractured pictures, beginning with a Hakone puzzle box (I didn’t know what that might be, had to look it up on internet: a craftsman-made Japanese puzzle box requiring anything from 5 to 66 moves in order to open.) What was inside the puzzle box we are not told, and perhaps the poet doesn’t know either because, he tells us, the opening mechanism of the puzzle box is broken – possibly something to do with a photo of David “in pantaloons as a child, smudged lipstick and rouge”? The poem ends, “Then, he shook it, for a charm to fall out.” This is a haunting poem, beautifully written.

It was almost a toss-up between first and second places. Because the theme of the competition was the one it was, I finally decided on the winning poem because it expressed so very well what many other poems entered had also said, or attempted to say, in concrete images and with no word wasted.

Ist prize: ‘Apology’. The theme of this poem was one common to so many entered: the battered woman apologizing to her violent husband/lover because she is convinced that if he hits her – and he does and has – it is entirely her own fault. The form of the poem, unlike some of the other poems on this theme, is controlled to perfection, consisting of only one sentence with no intervening punctuation between the opening and the final full stop. Thirty-six lines of equal length compose a rectangular block on the page that invites reflection: her house/a cage/ a prison in which the woman is trapped? Inside this box violence is expressed in vivid images: a smashed china teapot, a yellow fruit bowl overturned, purple plums bursting out of their skins, her torn red and black dress. This woman is violently beaten and raped in her home by her husband – and yet she is convinced it is all her fault and apologizes to her assailant.

To conclude: I have really appreciated how all the entrants, placed or not, managed to express themselves so well and vividly and thank those relating their own experiences for allowing me to enter briefly into their world and share a little of their sadness. To all these poets my very sincere good wishes.

Gabriel Griffin

Their Door

I’m back at their door. I am looking at their door.
I am looking harder at their door than I have ever done.

Paint is curling from it. It looks like a lamb’s fleece.
The brass number 3 has not been polished for months.

I can only recognise part of myself in it. Who am I?
I am still looking at the door. Look, the fox

still holds his tail high and as usual, his claws
are ready to pounce and snatch. No point in knocking.

Now it is dusk and I am still outside, staring at the door.
Dew begins to light the grass with its tiny beacons but

not the door. I know I want to see the door open.
I know what I want to see behind the door because

I want to see two beaming faces with a look of me,
arms outstretched. I want to see two beaming faces

with the look of me, arms outstretched.
I know the door will not open but I‘m still here

standing on the doorstep in this cold, endless night.

- Pat Borthwick
Highly Commended Poet, The TRYangle Project Poetry Competition 2011



Secret

This is our secret place, just you and I.
What fun we are having, we giggle all day
while snug in the bracken together we lie.

We may spot a lark, like a speck in the sky
till it snaps out of sight and the song drifts away.
This is our secret place, just you and I:

hidden, we see the red fox slinking by
and watch spiders weaving silk traps for their prey
while snug in the bracken together we lie.

The hours are too short here; how quickly they fly.
I’ll bring apples and chocolate, then we can stay
all night in our secret place, just you and I -

come under the shelter: no need to ask why.
The red sky will darken then bleach into grey
while snug in the bracken together we lie.

No need to tell Mummy, for Mummy might cry
then bad men would come and take Daddy away.
This must be our secret place, just you and I:
Sshh - quiet in the bracken, together we lie.

- Anne Ballard
Highly Commended Poet, The TRYangle Project Poetry Competition 2011

Thursday 17 November 2011

Punchbag

Ah used tae join in even,
when Ma was launching into him,
thought he was shan, weak, pathetic,
an empty shirt blown in the wind.

She’d be aw smiles ootside the hoose
but inside it would all kick off.
It was later I began tae ken
a punchbag has a strength enough,

a braw courage to absorb
that anger hurled day after day
and hold safe frae the ricochet
my sneering sisters and me.

It’s only now I ken
that accepting the jags and burling shoves,
just as the need tae inflict them,
show a girning kind of love.

- Simon Jackson
Third Prize Winner, The TRYangle Project Poetry Competition 2011

Apology

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- Jenny Donnison

First Prize Winner, The TRYangle Project Poetry Competition 2011

Inside David's Labyrinth

I sat behind my door in my little house,
which was all entry,
and thoroughly enjoyed its protection.

~ Henry Thoreau

It was worth this evening of gin and single malts
just to get these words on the page, a sadness that speaks
more of the world around us than the world inside us,
like a Hakone puzzle box, its opening mechanism broken.

These are not limpid waters, or standing pools
of light. The muse has left me, like a house sparrow, for the Nuttalls,
and then returned. It traversed with the wind, a vaned feather,
down to the tree line where it rested on a branch.

It was a Weymouth Pine, or something smaller,
more timid. David watched a racoon from his perch in my treehouse.
It looked sad, lying on its side as it gazed out at the world.
Through sleepy eyes, an acorn in its paw, half-buried in sand.

The muse rose as Black Orpheus, as if the song lilted its shadows.
The muse now lives in the shadow of the sundial,
its angular face turning to face northwest, lights beckoning.
My treehouse has become our treehouse through the years.

David remembered Camberwell and Peckham as brick and mortar,
a deep song, he used to say. Undergirding its poorest corners,
another unburnished voice, going at it alone.
It was a raw memory, each line rending another fractured picture.

There was a woman who counted beads every afternoon,
so long as eight ended up in the blue box, eleven in the green.
Sometimes she lined them up, like shale pebbles,
the paisley tablemat like the seven-ring labyrinth off Tintagel.

In the chapel was the old man with dementia.
Today, he wore his mother’s skirt, rolled up to his chest.
Beside him was the girl in the pink dress, her hair around her face.
The welts on her thighs that rose to her upper back.

David took a marker, wrote his name on the floorboards.
We shared a meat and pecan pie, in a box squat on newspapers,
as he pulled out old photographs from a shoebox.
One of him in pantaloons as a child, smudged lipstick and rouge.

He turned the puzzle box upside down, and looked for a turnkey
and drum and bells, as if it were a music box.
He said he saw his name on the underside, its simple geometry
weathered with age. Then, he shook it, for a charm to fall out.

- Desmond Kon Zhicheng-Mingdé
Second Prize Winner, The TRYangle Project Poetry Competition 2011

Competitions update

The TRYangle Project Poetry Competition
We are pleased to note that we have now received the results and judge's report on The TRYangle Project Poetry Competition. These results, the judge's report and the winning poems will be published in our News Blog on the 18th of November.

The TRYangle Project Short Story Competition
The stories are now with the judge and the results will be announced on the 15th of December.

Stepping Stones Nigeria Poetry Competition
The poems are now with the judge and the results will be announced on the 15th of December.