the salad lay in stripes - in metal trays -
sweetcorn celery cress
chopped tomato but no matter
for within two spoonings everything
leached with beetroot
even the water in the golden jugs
took on a pink tinge
wednesday was not a good day
for school dinners
on the flint strewn field
legs and arms locked baying
half the school caught and the other to catch
the weakest of the herd jump
three and four to a captive
hacking at ankles
windpipe crushed by an elbow
the knees traitor and yield
then gasping fight
as down they drop
grabbing them kicking them
until the shoulders are pinned
and their it - as you
while those more nimble
skip the last few yards
saving breath
for the return journey
it is not the whip of the cane which stings
but the act of bending over the desk
to face those
who should have been impressed
only the boys got it
it was a sign of being a man
like raps or chicken
if you cried you failed the test
and next time the penknife would be aimed at your foot
I cried
not because it hurt
certainly no more than double pack rap
but because I knew I would get it again
at home for getting caught
you got it because you deserved it
like beetroot on wednesday
the canes lived in the space between the bookcases
each bound at the end with red plumbers tape
varnished
linseeded
the red for a six
the green for a three
and the blue for the best
fronded fraying at the tip through the tape
blue ironic cold anger
the flint was aimed at me with intent
a flicked wrist
a snarl on the edge of tears - at my taunting
my reactions were too fast for the stone
past my ear
square into the forehead of the girl behind
a boy maybe six
but always the best for a girl
carried like a screaming pig by the neck
we followed at safe distance
through the pegs
draw string sports bags - footballers and gymnasts - shaking
like a boy drowning
or a paper fish in a cracker
he tried to rise
but the hand in his back bent him
and each time he dropped
the blue cane would swing down
for once
as we crowded the doorway
our eyes closed
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