Poet laureate captures family’s fight for justice
Carol Ann Duffy’s poem was published yesterday and is simply titled Stephen Lawrence.
It paints a picture of a flower growing out of Lawrence’s blood, which is nurtured by his mother Doreen.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdThe flower’s thorn, a “just blade”, eventually brings the family justice.
Patricia Ferguson, Scottish Labour’s culture spokeswoman, said: “It’s short and powerful, but also a very poignant poem.
“The poet laureate – whose job it is to write about events of our time – has certainly both recorded the tragedy of his very short life, but also the struggle of his family to achieve justice.
“I would hope it signals there is hope for the Lawrence family going forward, and more generally for society as a whole.”
Lawrence, 18, was stabbed to death by a gang of five or six white youths – including Gary Dobson and David Norris – who had racially abused him as he waited for a bus in Eltham, south-east London, on 22 April, 1993.
It is there, that Duffy’s poem begins.
“Cold pavement indeed
the night you died,
murdered;
but the airborne drop of blood
from your wound
was a seed
your mother sewed
into hard ground –
your life’s length doubled,
unlived, stilled,
till one flower, thorned,
bloomed
in her hand,
love’s just blade.”