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Writer's pictureThe Red Wheelbarrow Poetry

The thief

Stephen Symons


There was the thuggery of his desk,

its pine weight and rivers of wood grain

running beneath last year’s exam papers,

roughed-up textbooks and snapped rulers.


In the corner of his office

a basket of canes awaited selection,

above it, a certificate, and then a single frosted window

that looked out onto the quad,

censoring the view, yet open far enough

so I could see grazes of cloud over blue

and he could hear the conversations of teenage girls.


Two deflated rugby balls shared a shelf above his desk

stacked with more papers in manila folders,

an empty photo frame, books about discipline

and the minds of children.


He had accused me of stealing exercise books

and sent me to his office to await a caning at the end of class.


I waited for the coming fright of the bell, wondering —


Would I be allowed

to choose a cane from the wicker basket,

or what had happened to the stolen books?

There was the shape of his deformed pinkie,

the way it defied the other fingers of his hand,

how difficult it must be to catch a rugby ball

or steady a ballpoint.


I cannot remember if he caned me,


I do remember the cherry blush of his cheeks

and fine deltas of veins,

like the petrified rivers of Mars

that spread towards

the shave-lines of his jaw


and how he put me in the A team

when I tackled Neil Parker.


Featured on 3 June 2021


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