Writ on Cold Slate by Sylvia Pankhurst
In 1920 Sylvia Pankhurst was sentenced to six months in prison for publishing articles in the Workers Dreadnought asking London dockers not to load ships with arms to be used against the Bolsheviks. At her trial she declared: Capitalism is a wrong system of society and it has got to be smashed I would give my life to smash it. While she was in Holloway prison Pankhurst wrote the poems that became Writ on Cold Slate. It was the product of a period of intense and unrelenting activism by Pankhurst on behalf of the East London Federation of Suffragettes, campaigning for votes for women, and against the First World War. During these years she was imprisoned fifteen times. First published in 1922, the book takes its title from the refusal of the prison authorities to allow Sylvia Pankhurst any writing materials, so she had to use chalk to write what she called faithful lines upon inconsistent slate. Writ on Cold Slate is a classic account of life in a womens prison hardships and consolations, loneliness and comradeship, cruelty and kindness. Its a book about poor food, hard beds, jangling keys, cleaning-duties, exercise yards, force-feeding and padded-cells, dark days of madness lived between deep despair and desperate rage. Above all, its a book about the stories of the working-class women Pankhurst met in prison the young and the old, the homeless and the hungry, mothers, pregnant women and babies born in captivity dregs from the ancient systems wheel of waste
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