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A Breath of Fresh Air

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(Forgive the repetition of an earlier blog but I felt the need to offer respect and condolences to those in grief at Gleision in an industry I worked in for 20 years.)

 

As choking we emerged to sight, each blinking in the morning light

Not thinking that we ever might have seen the sun again;

By the pit gates loved ones waited, praying to their God that fate would

Hand us back unharmed from hated Death in Hell’s Domain;

Their ecstasy of dark relief these words cannot explain,

Nor bitter tears contain.

 

Two days before, a hammer’s spark ignited gas and lit the dark

As those nearby saw flash and arc – their death quickly came;

From further out we heard the roar, then felt the rush of wind before

The intake ventilation door blew off in broiling flame;

The moments next are lost to me; I’ll never ascertain

What happened as I’d lain.

 

Then as from some place distantly I heard the District Deputy

Whisper in my face as he screamed “Was I blind or lame?”

We stumbled where the roof would sag and picked our feet through flesh and rag

Collecting tallies for his bag, to give to each his name;

With every charred and dust-choked man as if in battle slain

The Best of Houghton Main.

 

A photo sits upon my shelf; it’s of the mine, the lads, myself,

Laughing, laiking, in full health before that shift, that day,

Reminding me of Hell and dust, and till I join them that I must

Uphold their memory and trust – that is the Miner’s Way;

To fail would be unthinkable – such brotherhood betrayed

Could never be repaid.

 

But in my sleep they did not die; I drink with them; we fight; we cry;

I find it hard to justify the reason I was spared;

I walk the tips; I fish the streams – no more to sweat in four foot seams

But wonder what our short span means, and offer up my prayer;

If only I could trade with them their Peace for my Despair

-           And a breath of my fresh air.

◄ Liposuction

"Widening the Circle of Friends" ►

Comments

Philipos

Mon 19th Sep 2011 21:23

As a claustrophobe I always shudder when I hear of these events wherever they happen in the world and this most recent one so close to home. Your words so eloquently tell the miner's tale.

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John Coopey

Sun 18th Sep 2011 20:51

Thanks for the comments, guys. As I said it's an old blog but I thought it appropriate to post it again. Apologies for the "repeat".

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Lynn Dye

Sat 17th Sep 2011 16:15

Wonderful tribute, John, extremely moving and so well crafted. Brought a huge lump to my throat. x

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Harry O'Neill

Sat 17th Sep 2011 14:45

John,
What a manly, descriptive, sincerly felt, tribute!It rings so true that any talk about poetic `negative capability` seems a bit trite.

The rhyme scheme is perfect, the penultimate stanza superb.

It warmed the cockles of my trade union heart.

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John Coopey

Fri 16th Sep 2011 23:46

There are 3 killers in coalmines; roof-falls, inrushes of water and gas.
Gas can kill toxically, like carbon monoxide, or explosively, like methane. A methane explosion is exacerbated if it develops into a more powerful coaldust explosion.
I worked at this mine for a short period (not underground I hasten to add) having joined the Coal Board some 2 months after the incident it refers to.

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