MindLeap Poetry Competition 2021

Sponsored by St. John鈥檚 Poet Laureate Mary Dalton to mark National Poetry Month 2021, in co-operation with the Department of English at 糖心视频 University of Newfoundland.
Entrants in the competition are asked to make a riddle-poem in which one of the following entities speaks: apple, bread, cancer, concrete, mask, motorcycle, Netflix, onion, the letter M or the letter O, tree, Zoom. The reader鈥檚 task is to deduce the speaker鈥檚 identity. There are samples of such riddles below.
Submissions may include more than one riddle focusing on more than one entity. Generally riddle-poems are short, ranging from four to ten lines or so; no line is superfluous, with each giving clues to the identity of the speaker. All submitted riddles must include the answer at the bottom of the riddle.
The competition winner will receive a handsome package of poetry volumes, by Newfoundland poets as well as poets from elsewhere, along with a poetry honorarium of one hundred dollars. The winning poem will be published in The Evening Telegram. The deadline for submissions is May 11, by 3 p.m.
Submissions must be hitherto unpublished in any form (print, electronic, or aural). All residents and former residents of Newfoundland and Labrador are eligible to enter this competition.
Because of the pandemic, please send your submission virtually, as a WORD attachment with no identifying information in the attachment itself. In the subject line of your email please put MindLeap Poetry Competition. In the body of the email, include your name, postal and email address, and telephone number. Send submissions to: english@mun.ca .
The winner of The MindLeap Poetry Award will be announced in The Telegram in mid-May and on the Department of English website and elsewhere in the following week. Arrangements for delivery of the competition prize will be made with the winner via email.
Sample riddle-poems (by Mary Dalton):
I鈥檝e got more pleats than a girl鈥檚 skirt鈥
and I鈥檓 the first to jump up for a dance.
I fancy the swoop, the razzamatazz.
Draw me out at a party and
I鈥檓 a real old smoothie.
Ah I鈥檓 on to the ins and outs of a tune.
But I鈥檓 a touchy sort: rough handling makes me squawk.
(*An accordion)
I鈥檓 a drifter, shape-shifter;
I鈥檓 prone to upheaval.
Now I鈥檓 castle, now cathedral.
Although you note my diminishing
there鈥檚 more to me than meets the eye.
(*An iceberg)
A jumbled alphabet鈥
I鈥檓 a means to your saying.
A skittering creature at rest by my side.
(*A keyboard)
There will be more sample riddles as well as information about the contest and the riddle- poem form in the May 10 edition of The Telegram newspaper. See too the riddle sequence 鈥淚鈥檓 Bursting to Tell鈥 in the poetry collection Red Ledger and the riddle-poem chapbook Between You and the Weather, both by Mary Dalton, as well as Sylvia Plath鈥檚 poems 鈥淢etaphors鈥 and 鈥淵ou鈥檙e鈥 online. (Note that the riddle-poem form focused on here is not the two-liner q. and a. form.)