explored

  Wondering if anyone will read my secrets

  And discover my thoughts

  What it would be like if someone were to open me up

  To rustle my pages and fold my corners

  Opening me up time and time again just to relive my

  past adventures into the unknown universe of imagination

  To whisper my untold words into a mind full of open pages

  All kinds of bookmarks being displayed to my eyes

  To fantasise about my journeys

  To dream about my secret entries and forbidden paths

  And travel to distant kingdoms

  But only one favourite returns to me in the end

  To be the last person I ever touch with my crinkled pages

  Highly Commended: Dog Bath Blues by Peta Vanlieshout from Walkervale State School, Bundaberg, Qld

  “Time for a bath!” My mum and dad yelled

  For muck, slime and grime was all that we smelled.

  We entered the yard where the dog lay asleep

  When I stood on a chew toy, he woke and began to leap.

  I grabbed the shampoo and a bucket of water

  He ran back and forth, I swear he yelled “Slaughter!”.

  He jumped and he yelped, he kicked and he nipped

  When he came charging at me, my heart nearly flipped.

  I stepped out of the way as he ran head on at me

  Following him out, things jabbed at my knee.

  Reaching the grass he was no-where to be found

  When suddenly, on my back, I felt a very heavy mound.

  I landed face first in the dry, stale grass

  My head had just missed a small shard of glass.

  I spat out some dirt and started to run

  I’II have to admit, this is kind of fun.

  I had tried everything to get him to stay

  Ready to give up, I walked away.

  The dog somehow followed me, not making a sound

  Grabbing the chain, I turned swiftly around.

  Chaining him up, I grabbed the water

  When out of the door, came my mum's step-daughter.

  ‘What are you doing?" She asked, “Can I try it too?"

  I said “Sure you can help me!" I gave her the shampoo.

  Soaking him in water and smothering him in Shampoo

  We scrubbed and we scrubbed til’ he smelt brand new.

  Stepping away, he shook of his fur

  ‘Must’ve liked it’ I thought as he began to stir.

  Walking inside, we were both soaking wet

  When my mum and dad yelled "Time to bathe Odette!”

  Highly Commended: Horses by Emma-Jane Emms from Rosewood, Qld

  Ponery ponies poetry poems. Horsery horses. Gallopy olipety clopety

  clop. Hair and mane flowing there. Hair and mane flowing everywhere.

  Brush horses knotty hair there, brush it everywhere. Horses, horses here

  and there. Saddlery saddles on horses. It is raining reins.

  Highly Commended: Jelly by Emma-Jane Emms from Rosewood, Qld

  Jelly is nice in your belly but your belly isn’t nice in your jelly

  jelly for your belly yummy, yummy, for my tummy,

  slimy ugly lumpy jelly.

  Highly Commended: Hey Echidna by Harmony Schloss from Blair State School, Sadliers Crossing, Qld

  Hey Mister Echidna,

  Some ants there have’ya?

  Some green, red and black,

  and I see spines on your back.

  What do they do?

  Oh, they’re there to protect you

  I hear mum calling for dinner.

  Nice to meet’ya, Mister Echidna

  Highly Commended: Soup by Emma-Jane Emms from Rosewood, Qld

  Pumpkin soup, onion soup, tomato soup, carrot soup, garlic soup,

  mushroom soup, Ieek soup, stew soup, any meat soup;

  yum yumo souperdy super soup,

  thin soup, lumpy soup, superbly super soup, slushy sloshy soup.

  Back to contents

  The Broderick Family Award - 14-15 Years

  1st Place: The Wolf Understood by Emma Hartley from Wahroonga, NSW

  The wolf

  Understood

  I was running away.

  An unwanted

  Daughter

  Sent out with that food

  And then to roam

  The streets

  So red.

  Sold to the night

  I wandered

  Down.

  Wandered lost of

  Neon lights and

  Groping hands.

  Dirt between the toes,

  The red cape

  Left behind.

  Exhausted of

  swimming

  alongside the sharks.

  Tired of life

  And enslaved to the night,

  I crumpled into open arms.

  2nd Place: And It’s Alice by Emma Hartley from Wahroonga, NSW

  He sees that figure

  Falling.

  And thinks,

  ‘Not again.’

  Who ever said

  Air was any

  Barrier?

  3rd Place: The River by Tamara Livingstone from West Moreton Anglican College, Karrabin, Qld

  Down to the river we go; you and I

  Down where the blue waters flow, you and I

  Underneath the stars and the darkened sky

  Down to the river we go, you and I

  Through breathless waters and dim navy skies

  Fly angels that weep and fae that

  So mournfully through the Cimmerian night

  And to the river we go, you and I

  Fireflies dance and shine gold in the

  Resplendent wyrms breathe their warmth into my

  Affluent heart that yearns for the light

  And into the river we go: goodbye

  Highly Commended: Women of Arachne by Emma Hartley from Wahroonga, NSW

  We sew and weave,

  And weave and sew.

  We watch the thread,

  As it bobs to and fro.

  We are women of Arachne,

  Not Helens of Troy.

  Men will not fight wars over us,

  No ships will they deploy.

  We cut and snip,

  And snip and cut.

  Cursed to a life,

  Where the door's always shut.

  We weave our own webs,

  We have our own story.

  Stories of calm and patience,

  Not of men and their glory.

  We are the Penelopes,

  Wives who await the return.

  But no one remembers to save us,

  As the world around us, burns.

  Highly Commended: Suburban Storm by Rosie McCrossin from Deagon, Qld

  The storm is an illusionist

  Spying from behind the housing estate

  At the gentle glow of suburbia

  It smiles

  Raising an aubergine eyebrow

  At its unsuspecting audience

  Time to put on a show

  First come the clouds

  Dark and thick

  Heavy bodies undulating across

  The royal blue-black sky

  Then a soft sprinkling of rain

  And thin breezes

  Which cut through the thick air

  Like cheese wire

  It is drugging the audience

  Waiting

  For the curtains to open

  And it begins

  Streaking silver slices through the languid clouds

  Blinding the spectators

  And the freezing rain

  Which falls in swollen drops

  On the tin rooves

  The deep snarls of thunder

  Which seem to sync with the sleeping suburbia’s heartbeats

  And the thin insidious winds

  Which infiltrate deep into bone


  The illusionist scrapes at every sense

  With sharpened fingernails

  And then with a quick swoosh of its fingers

  It departs

  Followed by its cumulus assistants

  Leaving a layer of thin fog

  Which hovers above the still warm bitumen

  Puddles and broken twigs in its wake

  Like merchandise in the foyer of the show

  Come and see the great illusionist

  Be shocked

  Be astonished

  Be stunned

  By the great magician – the suburban storm

  Highly Commended: Snail by Elena Bonetto from West Moreton Anglican College, Karrabin, Qld

  It’s a desert in my mouth,

  the moisture in my body is expelled through my pores

  as I stare down to my undoing, my doom

  my mind a foul blend of phobia and paranoia

  Double sets of eyes, monster made of mucus

  body of ectoplasmic excretion, unbeknownst, unaware

  as fear dances on my skin I envisage the sensation

  of my foot crushing, shattering the shell, ending a life

  Irony in the word 'shell', of less strength than sand

  floating, drowning, I'm petrified, welded to the ground

  as the horror of all horrors passes through my feet

  leaving a trail the colour of sputum down the street

  Highly Commended: Time by Shayla Parsons from Mt Hutton, NSW

  Time

  collects

  its ruins

  of civilizations

  people and

  individual lives

  time looks back

  on her collection

  of myriads of towers

  built up only to fall

  within her own landscape

  time admires her

  moments of yearnings

  and how beautifully

  they gradually

  decay, fall apart

  until nothing remains

  time is happy

  she does not hold

  onto anything

  she just goes on

  collecting in

  spite of it

  all

  Highly Commended: Tents and Campfires by Miriam Waldron from Strathfield, NSW

  Karl

  I’ve always taught my children

  To do what is asked, to follow orders

  But here and now, in my position

  It does not seem so easy anymore

  “You are herewith ordered” it says

  How can ink and paper be so frightening?

  I am leaving my daughter and my son

  They ask if there will be tents and campfires

  Remembering holidays in the mountains

  I pick up my case and put on my hat

  “Yes. Tents and campfires”

  Submission has to count for something

  My wife, my children,

  Am I to leave them so suddenly

  Like a thief in the night?

  “Failing this notice, you will be punished with Security Police Measures”

  I must go. They must be safe.

  Esther

  There was always music

  Playing in the background, softening the silence

  There was always a hum

  My father loved music

  He nearly cried when our radio broke

  All gone now.

  The silence is harsh and cutting

  Forcing us to reminisce

  I try to fill in the gaps

  The spaces between mindless chatter

  But speech is a well

  And it is running dry

  I have no plans

  My mother is a lost child

  Desperately searching, but never finding

  After three years, looking for a needle in the haystack

  Reality is cruel

  There are no tents and campfires where he is

  Only graves and gas.

  Highly Commended: Untitled by Stevie Tucker from Springfield Central State High School, Springfield, Qld

  As one mother’s fear,

  Become her daughter's worst nightmare.

  Breast Cancer patient, she was now classed.

  I could not help having a silent tear,

  How is this even fair?

  I continually asked?

  I don’t want to believe it,

  This can't be true,

  I just have to sit,

  Why did this have to happen to you?

  She's turning purple,

  She has no hair,

  I don’t want you to become an angel,

  I want us to stay a pair.

  They told me they had a cure,

  But now, I’m not too sure.

  I will always remember how it feels,

  To remember something so frightfully real

  Highly Commended: Things by Paige Spence from Attadale, WA

  Why do things fall off tables?

  It is because, in the spur of the moment

  They long to escape clammy hands,

  Fat fingers

  Prodding eyes

  And awful breath.

  So, with gravity gliding them

  They hit the ground running

  Before inevitably realising,

  Damn.

  I don’t have legs.

  Highly Commended: School Lessons by Arrabella Armstrong from Karana Downs, Qld

  I walk down the corridor

  Death is waiting at the door

  I swallow my fear

  to meet the grim reaper

  But to my surprise

  It’s just the teacher

  Back to contents

  Ipswich City Council Award - 16-17 Years

  1st Place: No Time for Skipping Stones by Christine Collier from Presbyterian Ladies College, Peppermint Grove, Perth, WA

  We would look through astrolabes on warm nights,

  after the night sky would remove its makeup,

  and let all its blemished skin appear and show off

  the scars once hidden by the blinding sun.

  And twist the hands as though by luck or chance

  we would manoeuvre the device,

  so everything would be clear and straightforward

  and the guessing could come to a stop.

  Then our eyes would shine from the knowing tears,

  that no longer must we look at the exploding balls of gas

  in space to find the shattered pieces that put together

  our lost souls and tomorrow would be just that which it always is

  We would sleep deeply and dream of nothing

  with doonas beneath us leaving our flesh to shiver

  and never remember being happier.

  When we no longer search for something better

  or fear for something invisible that could take away so much.

  And the blemishes on our skins would mean nothing,

  the tattoo of age would leave its inky mark.

  Continents would continue to move apart

  and it wouldn’t matter a single bit because

  we aren’t looking for a better place with a brighter sun

  or whiter shores to feel through our callused thumbs

  and there would be no need to leave footprints in the sand

  as we know they will be washed away anyway and the universe

  takes no prisoners of war. We are and we aren’t and that's it.

  Giving up didn’t mean to surrender but it did

  liberate us from the endless search for stars

  and answers which we never found or needed.

  And the silhouettes of our new lives were finally shaded in,

  and painted outside the lines.

  2nd Place: Children in Kansas Know What to Do by Siobhan Deacon from Presbyterian Ladies College, Peppermint Grove, Perth, WA

  They know how to get a blackbird o
ut of a brier.

  They know how to befriend a family of rabbits.

  They know how to skip.

  They know how to sing.

  They know how to sit

  On the kitchen floor

  Next to the other Mary.

  Not only blue but purple.

  They know how to wait.

  For the low growl of an ’86 Chevy.

  For the claw of a door

  And scrape of a boot.

  They know how to run.

  Daddy in Kansas knows what to do.

  He knows how to track a blackbird even in the sky.

  He knows how to skin a family of rabbits.

  He knows how to stomp.

  He knows how to shout.

  He knows how to paint

  The whore.

  Not only blue but purple

  Black and blue.

  Most of all Daddy knows how to teach.

  Until Children know how to learn.

  3rd Place: Red Sky in the Morning by Serena Green from Presbyterian Ladies College, Peppermint Grove, Perth,

  the end of time the beginning of eternity gift wrapped in a parcel of briny waves

  licking away winter cliffs on sunny rainy days an ocean song sings the waltz of the tide

  and the shore and the swing of hips outlining figures against a city sky illuminated

  with the glow of humanity a transition from starry night blue to red blood sprayed

  across a shattered windscreen glass cut clear in knives of silence like the hands of a

  counting clock tick tock tick tock tick ticktickticktick a fragmented explosion of

  lawn chairs and milkshakes in a café a balloon of fire swallowing days of sun on skin and

  sparkling delight signalling the end and beginning of a red sky day dawning and

  welcoming corpse cold fingers broken under the force of a hammer wielded through

  the strength of nations stone walls that don’t speak listen laugh cry communicating

  through unreachable means of written word passed through the ears not the eyes of a

  world sprouting reports of metal birds falling 20,000 ft in a controlled death spiral

  impacting and scattering the remains of advanced technology across the pages of

  entertainment tonight hailing a 20th century built through the eyes of a murderer and

  executed through the barrel of a Luger raising an army from the ashes of yesterday

  in a race to puppeteer the leaders of tomorrow and take one great leap for the

  continuation of mankind towards a blue sky day

  Highly Commended: A Forgotten Persia by Emily Byrne from Presbyterian Ladies College, Peppermint Grove, Perth, WA

  A forgotten Persia, sitting in saffron stained hands,

  The Maghreb. The Bedouin. The Arabian.

  The family honour dripping in origin.

  Soaked perfumed citreous, saturated in the sweet rose

  Aromatic khubz kneaded by antiquity,

  The echo of Adhan. The ring of Allah

  The mosaics of rituals, The continuum of

  Sifted sands and ancient souks.

  Honeyed tea and rosehip notes

  Diffusing into the richness of the khaima.

  The warmth of the hookah, the Arabian night,

  A social smoke of ancestors.

  As white as delusion, opaque opium clouds.

  Feet glued to the viscid treacle of tradition

  The rejuvenation of spring, awakened

  This ominous uprising of the desert.

  A rancid bread, now stifled and stale.

  Denounced by its own composition

  kneaded by the knuckles of power

  veiled in burnt frankincense, and acidic citrus.

  The red sea as bare as disillusion.

  Flowing through these blood stained hands,

  Old silk roads running backwards,

  Carrying the poisoned pomegranates of the past.

  The tribal staple, now the chief traitor.

  The food source and the retrenchment.

  The abusive mother, The khubz.

  The jewels of sheikhs, more important than ancient bread.

  Velvet smoke seeping under the cloth

  Awakening the dissatisfaction of taste

  Corruption biting into the bitterness

  No fragrances of Arabia can purify them.

  Polluted rosewater and jasmine syrup,

  Mosaics reshaped by the sands of the Syria.

  The Maghreb. The Bedouin. The Arab.

  Wandering the desert, correcting the future.

 

  Highly Commended: Verlang by Reinette Roux from Presbyterian Ladies College, Peppermint Grove, Perth, WA

  verlang/ longing

  seer/ pain

  eensaam/ loneliness

  kwaad/ anger

  magteloos

  Can the absence in my language be read

  Can the weight of it be felt

  The words are both the same in meaning

  But as I speak this rare tongue

  You understand only these:

  Dermis/ Dermis

  Pigment/ Pigment

  Trauma/ Trauma

  Therefore I give you my poem about the irreversible mark: a tattoo poem

  To carry the pigment from the point of the needle to the dermis that contains me

  You may not see it, but I do

  It’s my tattoo

  The lead, iron oxides, rusts, metal salts and plastics of the ink in my bloodstream

  Burden me

  I turn to homemade tattoo inks, made of soot, dirt and blood

  roet/ soot

  as/ ash

  brand/ burn

  and there was ink

  and there was memory

  and there was no pain

  the final curtain call and I bow to bear

  my tattoo to you

  Highly Commended: Warmth by Rosaleen Cooney from Hazelbrook, NSW

  I waited

  With open heart

  In the night's delight

  For your ambrosial voice

  To warm my bones.

  Highly Commended: Descendant by Samantha Brenz-Verca from Presbyterian Ladies College, Peppermint Grove, Perth, WA

  When the jacarandas flowered purple,

  My grandmother would come to visit.

  She would sit in the sun, filling in the

  Crosswords;

  my scrawny limbs settled in her lap.

  Absently, she would draw cats in the

  margins

  of the newspaper,

  she said ‘to keep me interested ’ and to stop me

  fidgeting and squirming and disturbing and distracting.

  But for me, the cats were

  an afterthought;

  I didn’t need a pretty picture to keep me focussed.

  Those Crosswords and my grandmother kept me endlessly

  engrossed sometimes until the stars came out to try to hug the sun.

  At school, kids obediently filled in sheets,

  practiced their spelling words and solved

  basic math problems; learned the parts of

  flowers, and Earth, geometry, human body;

  and ate white sandwiches from paper bags.

  I,

  on the other hand,

  would sit on a cushion by the window:

  perhaps reading books from the Year 7 shelves;

  maybe planning my latest story;

  sometimes dreaming about how snails decorated the insides of their shells.

  And at lunch I ate leftover mushroom risotto, or chili con carne;

  and I played cricket with the big kids, and soccer with the boys, and taught little girls hopscotch;

  but I always did what I was told,

  and I was taught to fit into the box.

  Wild runaway rosebush minds were snipped

  into neat green hedges, are manicured into

  obedience
and will be lined up in precise

  order. We’ll be compressed into squares to

  check the boxes, with their curt corners and

  shards of brick that stick in my throat at night.

  I always wanted to drink the air and taste the smells far away fom that box

  I yearned to bleed into paper in a beautiful mess,

  like a watercolour painting that

  drips

  and says so much; but still

  allows me to think for

  myself.

  Highly Commended: Design by Joshua Murray from Rosewood, Qld

  In

  the scrap

  metal

  yard...

  Sat, adjoined, an old car frame

  And a rusted, bent aeroplane...

  In

  the

  scrap

  metal

  yard.

  Hurricanes, tornados, and rains gusty

  Caused the metals grow more rusty,

  But not one car was screwed together

  And the plane crumpled due to weather...

  In

  the

  scrap metal

  yard.

  In

  a

  young

  child’s

  room...

  Lay a desk, a stool, eraser’s shavings,

  A lamp, a ruler, penny savings...

  And a

  scrap,

  blank

  paper.

  One small boy sat at his table

  And sketched a sword, a horse and stable,

  A car, a rocket, his friend, his mother,

  With one blunt pencil, one plain colour—

  On

  a

  scrap

  piece

  of

  paper.

  Highly Commended: Black Coffee for Breakfast? by Ellie Burton from Presbyterian Ladies College, Peppermint Grove, Perth, WA

  in the beginning, when water washed your earth,

  our pantheon was hung out to dry, parched then pontificated

  ‘woman’ is her name because she was taken out of man

  cooed mark and matthew so soft, now don’t fight

  papa grande is here, mourn right

  bleating like a foghorn, silence says

  I’m older than plastic forks and linoleum flowers,

  than pink candy stoves and sinks that bubble like gum,

  and behind the cloud’s tissue depressions

  she hides her green-eyed indiscretions

  and the artists said we’ve got you all figured out

  because delilah cut his hair and salome cut his head

  it’s whorticulture, we can weed pick and prune

  hand him the secateurs, hand him the scythe

  he’ll make you a wife

  I’m backready and backbroken she entreats

  you’re bloodset and bonedumb he replies

  if from womb to tomb my apples fall only towards you,

  my gossamer dress soiled, can my flaking bones lie beside yours,

  will you bury me in chores?

  beetroot stains my hands in Iscariot red

  a little water clears us of this deed, so prescribe me a penance

  my tears by your feet (on my knees) should atone

  an absolution in white, mary me and you’ll be anointed

  tie the knot and you’re appointed

  black coffee for breakfast my sweet? your habit since infantry

  for with fists of irons i can only poach eggs,

  sunny side up, ripe and pert we’ll butter your cups

  we’ll take you hand-me-down man

  and you can take us at your command

  then you’re second to one my darling, he’ll croon

  remember you’re only a star if there’s aniseed

  but first pillboxes suit you, it’s your shape your fit!

  so wait, lie in salt (it only stings a little) cure like meat

  as long as you’re fresh you’re not obsolete

  again the sun is two hours late

  sullied and diluted by the prison yard concrete of clouds

  smoked like lapsang, behind his fat cigar

  i waited up, feathered and downed the splintering dust

  i glad-wrapped lunches and cut your crust

  when you’re sick of the inner city squalor, tired of exhaust

  I’ve made a nest of asbestos and anesthetic

  with sweet bethesda, we can inoculate into apathy

  betadine for cuts and bicarbonate for stings

  watch fumbling fingers tie apron strings

  and when we’re melting by your fire,

  or just you and l and the bougainvillea sunset

  (it’ll only give a rash you say, pretty in pink)

  we’ll chase sorrow back to her damask lair

  we’ll rip the rose ribbons out of her hair

  so now I’ve saccharine starched your shirts and soles

  o darlings, come home sweet home

  into hibernation, you poor hares,

  poor greymen who whisper like parrots

  and sleep like wine

  asleep by half past nine

  Highly Commended: Shades of Red, White and Grey by Sean Adcock from Ipswich Grammar School, Ipswich, Qld

  Shades of red, white and grey runs through my veins,

  colour was once but not in this moment.

  To inner gibber jabbers annoyances,

  pacing the orbiting change.

  What and why meaning,

  when there are only shades of red, white and grey.

  Where the seeing from behind my eyes,

  takes place with enthusiasm and becomes of no importance to an optimist.

  To dream in tones of light and dark,

  to visualise all shades of red, white and grey -

  To envisage all shades in between.

  This is my certainty,

  living being an IGS red, white and grey lad.

  Highly Commended: Express Yourself by Hania Syed from Dunlop, ACT

  Yesterday I believe you took up yoga

  You said that your chakra was hollow

  But is it your heart or a trend that you follow?

  Stop embarrassing yourself in that toga

  Your hair's pink because it's such a statement

  Your diet consists of only tofu shakes

  But you're still smuggling in some steaks

  Strutting your bare feet on the pavement

  You're a walking, talking Reject Shop artwork

  Mantras stamped across your forehead

  Presumptuously appearing well-read

  Rehearsing your every oddity and quirk

  Tattoos in Chinese across your chest

  Did you know that's a takeaway menu?

  You're never sure if you're Hindu or a Jew

  Still on this bumbling, hopeless quest

  I love the way you eat wholegrain bread

  So counter-culture (and good for your bowel movements)

  Rocking glasses but no visual impairments

  Your Docs mean instant street cred

  You're a billboard, an unwitting mannequin

  A repetitive label, mass-produced creation
r />
  Cave in without a word of persuasion

  High on propaganda and organic pumpkin

  But you're not listening, you're elsewhere

  You say yoga just didn't connect with you

  And the universe's energies led you to

  Rock some bellbottoms with truly lunatic flair

 
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