Poem of the month


Colette Bryce
The Full Indian Rope Trick

 

There was no secret

murmured down through a long line

of elect; no dark fakir, no flutter

of notes from a pipe,

no proof, no footage of it -

but I did it,
 

 

Guildhall Square, noon,

in front of everyone.

There were walls, bells,
passers-by;

then a rope, thrown, caught by   the sky

and me, young, up and away,

goodbye.
 

 

Goodbye, goodbye.

Thin air. First try.

A crowd hushed, squinting eyes

at a full sun. There

on the stones

the slack weight of a rope
 

 

coiled in a crate, a braid

eighteen summers long,

and me

I'm long gone,

my one-off trick

unique, unequalled since.
 

 

And what would I tell them

given the chance?

It was painful; it took years.

I'm my own witness,

guardian of the fact

that I'm still here.

 

To celebrate 30 years of the

National Poetry Competition we

ran an online poll to find the most

popular winning poem. The poem

with the most votes was Colette

Bryce's 'The Full Indian Rope

Trick', winner in 2003.

© Colette Bryce. Used by

permission. Colette Bryce's

Self-Portrait in the Dark is

published by Picador on

5 September.

Read more poems

Picture of Gearoid MacLochlainn

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Colette Bryce's poem, 'The Full Indian Rope Trick' , has won the Poetry Society's online poll to find the most popular winner of the National Poetry Competition. The competition is now in its 31st  year and the deadline for entries is 31 October.

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