Prison Scenes

 

Take a piece of satin, blue sheen,

appliqué to cool shadows

under a generosity of willow.

So many ducks this year.

You’ll have your work cut out

to stitch them into the scene.

Whole families of them squatting

on the green between prison houses.

Forty, fifty, more. Take a piece

of brown worsted, stitch

a mother duck, purposeful,

proud, her neck and head stiff

like an umbrella handle.  Some

of the women rise early to feed them

on yesterday’s sandwiches.

It’s against the rules but they know

mothers needs encouragement,

need a little help along the way.

Take a piece of white thread,

stitch a discreet trail of breadcrumbs

leading away from the window.

 

***

 

In the hour’s Association Time

they give their bodies up to sun,

some stick-straight, some

curved, coiled, clustered

on the embankment –

a reckoning in roman numerals,

a cyphered message

that can only be read from the moon.

 

***

 

Take a piece of silk thread,

spin it to a dull pallor,

scar it with snags,

pin it to a bed

in the shape of a woman.

 

 

 

Joy Winkler is currently touring with her verse/drama TOWN.  She works in prisons and with community groups in the North West. Her most recent collection is On The Edge. www.joywinkler.co.uk