Winning Poem 2025

Phoenix Theorem
by Nnamdi Ndiolo

God wipes us from heaven’s board,
scattering us into the wind like a curse.
Because we are unsolvable equations.
Because we are the rainbow’s coefficient.
& the moon sketches a rhombus:
boys unbuttoning boys like brackets,
moans multiplying in a piano’s throat,
keys dissolving into Pi’s endless cry.
& my country cleaves in protest,
mobs neck-lacing them with tyres,
& the fire flares with a swansong.
The preachers swear boys in love
are born to burn, calls it gospel.
Yet flames cannot claim us.
& on my windowsill, swans sing
a Pythagorean elegy for burnt boys.
& they rise, a theorem of wings
daring God: Solve us! Solve us!
Ashes are not burnt boys—
they are seeds of the Amazon,
a wildfire of freedom.
Dawn dissects the sky with rain.
& I hurl prayers at heaven like larks,
daring X to equal happiness.
& the larks return with a scroll:
‘‘Your body is the hypotenuse of sin.’’
But despair is dust beneath my feet.
Boys in love are gods,
& no formula can solve us.

Other shortlisted poems are:

Khasiyawaala

by Stuti Sinha  

A jingle of rickshaw bells 

drowns the clamouring cry

 

of a khasiyawaala.  I dreamt 

of the ancestral home in Purnea 

 

this morning.  She stretches her arms

to draw my arteries.

 

Paanch packet please.  

A grin hisses through his uneven teeth,

 

paan-stained.  He rattles the chana around, 

like pea-gravel crunching 

 

under laboured feet. 

Thoda aur masala, I point to the spice blend, 

 

pulling on the memories of Purnea

Ji, as he scoops up the spice blend

 

and swirls the earthy pebbles swirl

a few final times

 

before he portions everything

into five newspaper cones.

 

I beat the early shadows of nightfall 

to my door and offer a cone to my nephew. 

 

Kya hai yeh? He stares at the pearls of gram

he has never seen before.

 

Bored, he pops a handful into his mouth.

I silently lament

 

the soft demise of the custodians

of moribund traditions, and wonder

 

how many more faded 

into clumps of dust over time.

My Father Lived by Regent’s Park

by Maxine Sinclair

I found myself in Regents Park tube station today. 

Unintentionally. I’ve avoided it for years in case he’s still here

hands in his pockets guarding his Carlton filter tips

rocking on his heels smacking his lips laughing

with loose change rattling like old bones

his skin leathered from that one day of sun

his strong nose – the beautiful centrepiece of his face

gap toothed smelling of Brut and unwashed socks

saying ‘that’s marvellous’

full of jokes until he’s not 

whistling a tune nobody knows

gazing at somewhere further down the line. 

 

The Victorian wall tiles domino like diary pages.

And as the departing train’s gust leaves my lungs

I’m half relieved he isn’t here.

I still wouldn’t know what to say. 

Idea of Spring

by Juliet Humphreys

is nice enough – the quiet of bare branches

giving way to an explosion of blossom

as if the day itself has woken

after a bout of flu just wanting to dance –

but you need to remember

(and this is what I always forget)

spring is also wind and rain.

It’s like moving in with someone new —

for all the loveliness to come

those first few nights

when they’re asleep and you’re not

aren’t ideal and now you’re expected

to fill your days, to be out there,

parading about town

like you’ve won gold, and waving

to the crowds of singletons and widows,

all hailing you as their heroine,

everyone wanting autographs

and selfies and now there’s to be

a book and a film and a Barbie.

You drop your arm and stifle a yawn.

Winter was so easy.

The Octopus Remembers the Fisherman’s Wife

after Hokusai

– by Ian McClure

I tasted her with suction

in a hundred places

her skin blind and smooth

here and there slippery

milder than the sea

 

so cryptic and so pale

just one pulse, buried deep

but still warming everything

dark hair streaming

seagrass in the swell

 

so different to this self

of shifting iridescence

patterned jet and pearl

liquid muscle movements 

reaching out to touch

 

she opened like a bivalve

in a soft, spring tide

dilating curiosity

currents of internal blush

capillaries in flood

   

she welcomed every probing tip

each absurd embrace

between the land and sea

she coiled, shut her eyes

pulled us down together 

 

I am old, dying now 

my nine brains dissolving 

three hearts arrhythmic

copper gloss of my blood

clouding into grey

 

so I remember her

returned to the shore

astonished by a creature

summoned from the rich abyss

of her private sea

Helen Cox

Competition Judge : Writer and Coachtim-symonds-photo-by-lesley-abdela-110

Helen Cox is a Yorkshire-born novelist and poet with an MA in Literature and Creative Writing from the University of York St John. Helen has produced two poetry pamphlets and has had individual poems published in Popshot Magazine, Riggwelter, Visual Verse, Pop the Culture Pill and the TL;DR Women’s Anthology, among many others. She frequently runs online poetry workshops that are free to no income and low income poets and runs an annual masterclass for advanced writers in the craft. Helen also hosts The Poetrygram Podcast.