POETRY
making
Published in Westerly
After ‘Digging’ by Seamus Heaney
In the corner of my desk lie scraps of paper.
I tuck them away in the old sewing basket.
My grandmother could sew anything from a salvaged
yard of cloth. A glance at a picture of a frock
in a magazine held up by one of her girls –
in a morning she’d have it made. No pattern,
just kitchen table skill, a mind quick with the maths
of straight lines, curves and darts, her eyes
sharp as the slice of her scissors on chalked
lines, sending tiny clouds into the air. My mother,
tape measure round her neck, ends swinging,
a meter of fabric before her, in her hand the good
scissors, bottom blade gliding over the laminex,
top blade cutting round the tissue-paper edges
of the pattern we picked out from the shop
down the street. The old sewing basket is full now,
scraps of paper spill over the brim, words and lines
that pop into my head at work, on the train,
on the bus, on weekends, scribbled fast
before they fade. I’ll make with them.
Credit:
Text and image © Lea McInerney
Published in Westerly 61.2, 2016