The best thing—in Shadow's opinion, perhaps the only good thing—about being in prison was a feeling of relief. The feeling that he'd plunged as low as he could plunge and he'd hit bottom. He didn't worry that the man was going to get him, because the man had got him. He was no longer scared of what tomorrow might bring, because yesterday had brought it.
Neil GaimanMots clés fear prison relief american-gods
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[Prison Break is] one of the craziest, most unpredictable roller-coaster rides on TV today.
Stephen KingMots clés prison escape lincoln company king tv stephen break bagwell burrows fox michael-schofield show t-bag theodore
You're still in prison if you do nothing better in freedom.
Toba BetaMots clés freedom prison doing-better
La joie réside au plus intime de l'âme; on peut aussi bien la posséder dans une obscure prison que dans un palais.
Thérèse of LisieuxMots clés joy prison joie ste-thérèse
oh shit it's shit
Stephen KingMots clés prison different seasons stephen-king shit novella hayworth rita shawshank-redemption
THE CURSE
May they never
Return home at night...
May you have no part of eventide,
May you have no room of your own,
Nor road, nor return.
May your days be all exactly the same,
Five Fridays in a row,
Always an unlucky Tuesday,
No Sunday,
May you have no more little worries,
Tears or inspiration,
For you yourself are the greatest worry on earth:
Prisoner!
Mots clés prison curse malediction prisoner
Handcuffs weigh much more than gravestones.
(from "Gratitude")
Mots clés prison prisoners gravestone handcuffs
IN OUR CELLS
They keep us in our cells
For a long time...
And, if we get out,
We lug them with us on our shoulders,
Like a porter with a chest of goods.
Here was a temporary solution. Parole would get Mofokeng and Mokoena out of jail as quickly as possible. Other details could be sorted out later. I accompanied Nyambi to Kroonstad jail at the end of October and remember that as he told Mofokeng and Mokoena the news—that they would be home for Christmas—smiles slowly but surely transformed the sombre, cautious expressions on their faces.
Big problem: it was discovered in December, a full two months after the judgment was made, that the court order does not mention the NCCS at all. Consequently, the NCCS interpreted the court's order as having removed the NCCS's jurisdiction to deal with any "lifers" sentenced pre-1994. The members of the NCCS packed their briefcases and went home.
No one knows why the judgment didn't mention the NCCS; maybe the judge who wrote it, Justice Bess Nkabinde, simply didn't know how the parole system operates; but eight of her fellow judges, the best in the land, found with her.
The Mofokeng and Mokoena families, who are from 'the poorest of the poor', as the ANC likes to say, are distraught.
But the rest—the law men, the politicians and the government ministers—well, quite frankly, they don't seem to give a fig. Zuma has gone on holiday, to host his famous annual Christmas party for children. Mapisa-Nqakula has also gone on holiday. Mofokeng and Mokoena remain where they were put 17 years ago, despite not having committed any crime.
Mots clés politics prison christmas crime human-rights south-africa 2010 african-national-congress jacob-zuma bess-nkabinde false-imprisonment human-rights-in-south-africa life-imprisonment nosiviwe-mapisa-nqakula parole prisons-in-south-africa
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