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Our Gardener Ali – Claudia Snow

By | 2019 runner up | No Comments

OUR GARDENER ALI

As the sun sets, burnt copper through city haze,
Heralding the coming eve, Ali takes his leave.
In the fading light, the overwhelming blue
Of his boiler suit is muted a pale violet,
Aching feet eased by the warm pavement,
Where thick heels overhang their worn leather shoe.
The pavement swarms.
Ants.
Blackberried bellies heaving beneath concrete slabs,
The familiar scratch, trumpet to an undying crusade,
But not tonight, tonight he will wait, overshadowed beneath white wings,
Eden’s eaves, as the garden surrenders the night.
He makes his way to the rim of the park.
There, a mud hut, made a home by a single bulb,
Shelters all his worldly possessions,
A bed, a mini fridge, a change of clothes.
It is this change of clothes he takes, swapping the suit
For a salmon pink shirt and tie, loafers far too big,
Handed down from the Egyptian man who lives in villa 25.
We flocked, the neighbourhood children, perched
In groups of threes, on compound walls,
Nestled amongst milky white,
To test bony fingers against paintwork and watch,
Silenced and cat-eyed,
As lopsided, he takes to his beaten path. Fridays to the mosque,
Tomorrow we will walk the same to Saturday brunch.
His bald head in the half light wet nosed like a lamb’s,
Leaving behind a kingdom of jaded greens,
Such lush blades of grass, which in spite of the desert air, are laden in dew,
Haloed, under the buzz of the tennis court’s fluorescent lights.

 

 


Claudia Snow
Year 12
Wakatipu High School

Orion’s Rust Belt – Charlotte Boyle

By | 2019 runner up | No Comments

Orion’s Rust Belt

The huntsman came looking
for something
and certainly
he did not find it.

We met him at the bus stop
picked up his luggage
then we went out for dinner
at the steakhouse.

Sometimes you can see the stars
out in the desert
reflecting the billion grains of sand
slipping and sliding
down the hourglass
counting away the decades.

The huntsman spoke at our funeral
before leading the procession up the mountain.
Everyone followed with their old boots
and pitchforks
but the road stops
seven miles out
from Olympus.

 

 

Portrait of Charlotte Boyle
Charlotte Boyle
Year 13
Cashmere High School

You’ll remember – Catherine Marshall

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You’ll remember

you’ll remember
that one summer
it was me and you
and taumati
and sometimes fabian
(who calls their kid fabian anyway)
but their mum was a bit
weird, eh,
made us that quiche with
sultanas
gave me the big
bit cause i was the
only girl
i didn’t mind

couple of things
from that summer
stand out:
when we egged alicia
suarez’s house
she pushed fabe in the
fountain
the bitch;
and when we jumped
into the
river
out the back of your house
it was
freezing
i didn’t want to
didn’t bring togs
you pushed me in
i was sure
(and i’ll only say this now)
that you had a
crush
on me
would explain some things

thing is
that summer
(or was it autumn?
greymouth, man
not orlando—
rained every second day)
i’m starting to forget
there was something
that happened
there was you
there was me
i forget
i know you’ll remember


by Catherine Marshall
Yr 12, Rangi Ruru College