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Mary Seacole

by lucy-houbart

Mary Seacole Black nurse sculpture Your determination points To injustice. Your struggle To serve, be accepted. Why were you shamed and denied? This is the broken land where we live. Your courage, your stride Takes me to our weakness To the ache in my chest like a broken blood vessel. And trace the lines in my hand To a bad rotting root. How many wounds did your hand with compassion soothe? Behind your certitude I imagine pain. Did your hurting Search out injury and loss? And as you nursed those violent lacerations, Patiently waiting whilst the pathway beat its course, Did you see as if through a veil, Your own fractured self, Fusing with your patient’s, Both your Injuries restore back together All the way towards their good health?
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Written by
lucy-houbart
51 / F / Watford
For You?
Written by
lucy-houbart
51 / F / Watford
Published
Jun 18, 2020
Time
2m
Notes

This poem is inspired by the sculpture by Michael Jennings which is of Mary Seacole which stands outside St Thomas's hospital looking over the river Thames and towards the House of Parliament.

Tags
#public#sculpture#artwork#blm#shame#injustice#mary#seacole
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