Poetry without Paper 2020
2020 Contest Winners
Middle School
First Place, Middle School
Josephine West
O’Maley Innovation Middle School
“Hymns and Handstands”
Pencil rests behind his ear,
critical eye judges:
bones, sticks, clouds
littered across pages.
A purring motor drones from a cocoon of blankets,
Queen Clementine ruling her kingdom,
a stationary monarch.
Seagulls screech outside-
she flies, a blurry orange streak.
Cat thunders downstairs
to a graceful gymnast,
legs suspended in air, until-
crash!
She falls, a heap of limbs.
Joining joyful ruckus,
my fingers slide up and down frets,
plucking notes that drift
into the magic kitchen.
Sweet-smelling slightly charred carrots,
creamy feta, crunchy-smooth walnuts topped
with spring-smelling sprigs of dill
prompt a chorus of growls from our stomachs.
Chord sheets pepper the island,
strums and stirs synchronized,
handstand percussion
drumming out the beat.
Artist descends, stairs creaking.
We gather.
Chef hollers orders,
and we oblige
with minimal grumbling.
Prettily presented veggies blanket table.
We sit, our hands linked.
Meows accompany our grateful refrain,
and at last, we feast.
Second Place, Middle School
Lyall Cunningham
O’Maley Innovation Middle School
“Contemplate”
On the rock I sit
to think,
to contemplate
my actions
thus far into life.
My hair in the wind,
I am all but still.
The cool breeze in my face,
my thoughts swirl.
These drafts of thought
are more wild
than my hair
in the wind.
Third Place, Middle School
Talia Higgins
O’Maley Innovation Middle School
“The Weeping Willow” |
The wind sings a sorrowful song She hears a familiar melody A robin lands on her shoulder |
Honorable Mention
Natalie Sheedy
O’Maley Innovation Middle School
“Dream State”
Drifting to another world,
Hoping it’s permanent, knowing it’s not.
The night is yours to wish away.
The moon and stars looking down upon you.
Inner darkness finally melts away leaving true happiness.
Sometimes startling, dark, but everything happens for a reason as they say.
A distant memory the next day.
Sad when that time, state, turns into the best part of your day.
Dreaming, the most desperate wish for hope.
Night turns to day, once again we wait to feel fully free.
High School
First Place, High School
Willa Brosnihan
“Refilling”
Finger depress the tongue-latch of the door,
trigger her gag reflex and slide,
leaving open, hoping no other feels the draft and closes,
out, across the parking lot,
too quick a trip for a coat, arms crossed and nose up,
smelling ice, smoke from the kitchen,
the plain reverse of Main Street lit in orange.
The flashlight, click the button three times,
it must be convinced. Open
the cathedral mouth of the shipping container and shine in
the light, look for hiders, girl snatchers,
find none.
Enter like Pinocchio, unhumble, biblical,
into the whale. Tickle her insides for replacements,
for the things used up. It is supremely quiet.
It is cold. Run back across the parking lot now,
be re-swallowed like a lover after betrayal,
forgiven, and stack,
what you’ve gathered
where it’s easy to find. Watch Fransisco, Frankie,
sorting silverware. The clatter.
You are among people. Outside
you’d been like rhythm,
unfelt but shaking
the air which was the everything.
Second Place, High School
Autumn-Marie Silva
“Lucky Feet”
Third Place, High School
Calhoun Dyer
“Snowy Owl”
To loft freely above the highest bough
With wings of fluffy down
Softening any sounds
Unknown, unfound
A greater freedom than man can know
Borne aloft on feathers of snow
Honorable Mention
Mila Barry
Honorable Mention
Katrina Machetta
“Home”
The sound of the unfamiliar language.
The smell of pasta and fish in the market.
The sight of old photographs with people
we never talk about anymore.
The place I call home
but
Never put as my permanent address.
The brokenness we never talk about is why I keep coming.
The yesterday that no one remembers
formed the today that people always talk about.
I love every flaw because that is when I realized what beautiful really means.
I want to show you my gratitude but money can’t buy a thank you or I love you.
We could talk today,
but I don’t want to get stuck on our yesterday.
Just open your arms-
because tomorrow I will be home.
Honorable Mention
Sarah Nealon
Children’s New and Recommended
CHILDREN’S NEW AND RECOMMENDED