A last minute entry for a poetry competition by students from Johnston Primary School has yielded a prize.

The year five and six pupils, taught by Tim Pounder, entered a worldwide competition to contribute towards ‘Dylan’s Great Poem’, a bi-lingual piece of work written by young people aged 7-25 to mark International Dylan Thomas Day.

To enter, budding poets had to submit four lines of no more than eight words per line inspired by Dylan’s famous poem ‘The hand that signed the paper.’

The best 100 lines received were then combined to create the ‘Great Poem.’

The poem was recited live at Cardiff Library on Saturday, May 14th the date of International Dylan Thomas Day.

From the hundreds of submissions, eight pupils from Johnston C.P. had their lines chosen.

Mr Pounder said having so many make up the final poem was a wonderful surprise. He said the competition result was a bonus. It was the way all the children within the class embraced the task was what really impressed him.

“I only decided to enter the competition at the eleventh hour and thought we had left it too late so to have so many lines be included in the poem is an unexpected bonus.

“We just did some classwork based on it and asked them to think about how they could contribute to the ‘Great Poem’

“We put a lot of emphasis on writing for a purpose in school and this helped focus their thoughts. It shows what can be achieved by our pupils. Once the children started talking about what ‘The hand that signed the paper’ was about, they really got into it and the quality of their work was incredible.

“In my day, we didn’t touch poetry at this level until we were in secondary school but if you don’t give children opportunity you don’t know what they are capable of and the pupils have created something inspirational.”

“I’m extremely proud of them,” added Mr Pounder. “Firstly, for showing such enthusiasm for poetry and secondly for creating such brilliant work.”