by Mark Richardson
Now You See Them
How Many Must Die ?
"Ron Vearncombe joined PGS as a maths teacher in 1948, becoming head of Mathematics in 1954, and he remained at the school until his retirement in 1978. He combined academic excellence with modesty, lightning wit, compassion and common sense. Not only was Mr Vearncombe an inspirational maths teacher, but also a dedicated cricket coach, a talented artist and a gifted piano player – a true polymath. He established the Leonardo Competition in 1958 because he wished to foster creative talent in the school.”
Having by that time run the Leonardo Poetry Competition six times, I received the above information out of the blue in an email from Mr Doyle about the genesis of the competition, and suddenly the true value of the event came into sharp focus. Having only arrived at PGS a year earlier, I was excited by the idea of taking on the running of the poetry competition. I loved the idea of a public performance as the central part of poetry at PGS. Too often at schools poetry is a solitary art and act, printed perhaps in a small booklet or the school magazine, but never given pride of place in the way in which, music quite rightly is. But the added realisation that this was all part of a tradition of creativity, with a specific person and date of origin, made it far more real and organic for me: this was not just an English department event, but a PGS one, with a history that was almost as lengthy as my own!
Back then, as now, the event took place at the end of the summer term; back then, as now, it was open to all; and back, as now, poets and parents were invited to an evening to celebrate the act and art of poetry. There were changes in venue: first in the Cathedral, then in the Memorial Library and latterly in the Sixth Form Centre. But each year, we followed a pattern, unbroken. All was seamless: we planned as usual for this, with the added twist that it would be my final event at PGS, with my impending retirement sharpening my approach to this year’s event. What I did not notice was its numerological significance: it would be my thirteenth!
So, not so seamless! No public event, no rehearsals with poets, no speeches, no applause. And, because it was always completed by its award to the overall winning poet, no presentation of the Leonardo Poetry Cup. Well, no physical one at the moment, that is.
But with change comes opportunity. So many great poems emerged from a bumper crop of entries: over 350 this year. Each year the competition has a theme: this year’s theme of 20 20 Vision seemed particularly apt. The year date, the events of the year thus far, its impact on all of us, leading to hopes and visionary dreams of the future, all seemed very fruitful. And so it proved.
The poems reflected all of the above and more. They showed how the writers have engaged with their own selves (both positively and darkly) and with the world around them. Indeed, the overriding view from these poems gives us a brief flash of how turbulent this year has been, but also how much it has given us all to think about in terms of what we value, of what we have realised is really important to us. These writers have found ways to combine familiar words (and some less so familiar ones too) in new ways to help make some sense out of the challenging events and unfamiliar perspectives that we have all been granted on the world around us: the importance of hope, the destruction of a fragile world, the need to strive for social justice, the importance of nature, the fragility of life, the threat of loneliness and the importance of friends and, above all, family.
Below, are the winning poems from Years 7, 8. 9, 10 and 12.
We Will And We Are
Naomi Miesi (7Z)
We’re hiding
We’re destroying
We’re Burning
Fires crash down swallowing lives of innocents
We’re shooting
We’re killing
We’re crashing
Bombs of anger, hatred and greed destroy 176 lives
We’re threatened
We’re terrified
We’re lost
On the brink of war.
We’re coughing
We’re choking
We’re sick
Seas of masks and isolation. Mentally and physically trapped.
We’re falling
We’re crying
We’re cherishing
Kobe and Gigi fly as angels
We’re oppressed
We’re mourning
We’re tired
I CAN’T BREATHE, BLM
We’re marching
We're dying
We’re fighting
Day after day we wonder when will this stop
We’ll hope
We’ll realise
We’ll be happy
One day
We’ll see the hope and light in every situation
We’ll rejoice
We’ll accept
We’ll stand together
All as one
We’ll get through this
We’ll finally see what is right what is wrong
And our lives will all be lived in harmony.
I See Hope
Tom Clarke (8V)
I see hope.
In the future I see
Only darkness
There cannot be
Good
Lght
Innocence
There will be no room for it now
Selfishness is for everyone
Though
Light will try and shine through the cracks,
Despite everything
It failing is inevitable
Darkness will rise
It does not matter that
Some humans are good
They do not matter
There are more bad people than good
And this may be our future unless we change
And this may be our future unless we change
There are more bad people than good
They do not matter
Some humans are good
It does not matter that
Darkness will rise
It failing is inevitable
Despite everything
Light will try and shine through the cracks,
Though
Selfishness is for everyone
There will be no room for it now
Innocence
Light
Good
There cannot be
Only darkness
In the future I see
I see hope.
Now You See Them
Grace Alexander (9Z)
Now you see them,
Now that it affects you
Only now do you see them,
That it fits with your busy, busy life,
Now that it causes you bother
Now you see the issue,
After it’s taken over five decades to reopen your eyes,
To acknowledge your privilege
Now you see them,
Now we fight for justice,
To end the oppression and suffering that you are privileged enough to be oblivious to.
After years of fighting and progress,
We are still in this place filled with hatred,
But we are still fighting for a change that has to come.
One day all this effort and rage will be worth it,
But the lives lost can and will never be,
Nor can they be forgotten or forgiven.
For the loss of a brother, son, father,
Sister, daughter, mother
But most importantly a human being to be the only way for people to truly see the brutality and reality of the situation,
Is a tragedy
A disgrace.
How were we so blind?
How do we let them just cover up the true wrongs in the world?
Change must come.
Time
Eli Merrigan (10T)
Twenty twenty.
It is the time for resistance,
The time for uprising,
The time for change.
Twenty twenty will go down in history.
It is the first glimpse of the tides shifting,
The moment when the waves roll back before crashing to the shore.
And these waves will be loud,
And they will be harsh.
And they will wash away the dirtied sand of corruption
And replace it with a glowing stretch of hope.
Red faces, bulging veins, shouting voices.
You say violence isn’t the answer
And that equality has been achieved,
That we live in a post-racial society,
While you join your hands with others that look like yours
To protect a monument of hatred
That you hold so dear.
You spout your hateful rhetoric,
Saying “all lives matter” in your blood red hats.
But tell me,
If you truly believe that then
Why does black lives matter bother you?
If all lives matter then what about
Immigrants?
Disabled people?
Trans people?
Black people?
People who don’t have a soft warm blanket of security
And walls built out of their own ego surrounding them wherever they go?
Or to you does all lives matter mean
I want to keep my privilege. I want to be proud of my culture
That is built on bloodshed and racism.
Your life only matters when it benefits me.
I am a white person.
I was born with privilege.
And now is the time to use that privilege for good.
We cannot stand, watching from a distance
At the bang of batons hitting and bullets piercing into black skin.
We cannot sit by as friends and family
Spit venom in the form of words.
We must be better.
Black people should not have to
Convince you that their lives matter.
We need to ensure that the attitudes of white people change.
Because all lives cannot matter until black lives matter,
So we must make everyone know that they do.
How Many Must Die ?
Emma Moseley (Y12)
How many must die before things change?
Their lives remembered
Only as numbers.
The world is unravelling, frantically winding out of control
But how was it held together before?
Black skin is a death sentence.
Black skin has been a death sentence for the past 400 years.
Children lie dead in the streets. We step over their corpses.
They deserved it.
We called them super predators
stripped them of their innocence
forced them into the streets
locked them in prison cells
killed their parents.
And we pat ourselves on the back: this is how it is.
Things mustn't change.
They can't.
13% of the USA population is black.
43% of the victims of fatal police shootings are black.
How many can you name?
How many must die before things change?
We drank the kool-aid.
We've been drinking it for centuries.
It's time to wake up.
But I am tired.
Existence is hell.
My gender demonises me, it damns me.
I am not your plaything.
I am not your sexual currency.
I am numb.
137 women killed by a partner every day.
How many can you name?
How many must die before things change?
It's time to wake up.
How many fear holding hands with their love?
Do you?
I do.
I cannot love who I choose.
12 countries can legally kill me.
Will you remember my name?
Will things change if I die?
Our soil is saturated with tears,
Our oceans are filled with screams.
No one is safe until we are all safe.
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