THE PRICE OF COAL
After the blast at the Spring Hill Mine, walls closed down,
a colliery collapsed, blocking stulls shuddered splitting
strata of sandstone and shale. The rattle of the belt and clatter
of the cutter blade was no longer heard.
In the chasm of a mine shaft a dozen miners got a glimpse
of the gaping maw of an alternate world, a simulacrum
of being dead. Imploding pillars of fissured rock imprisoned
the men in a three foot seam two miles down a pit shaft
with six hundred feet of bedrock and slag above their heads.
In pitch-black darkness a blizzard of bituminous coal whirled
around their faces. They sat in a semi-circle on quivering
ground, jolted continuously by the crack and crumble
of metaphoric rock. They sang hymns, trembling as they sang.
Waiting in exiguous tomb-like breathing space with no food
and little water they rationed liquid to one sip a man.
They tried quenching thirst by sucking on coal and scaffolding
of Douglas-fir before drinking their own urine until it turned
sour. Five days later they heard the drilling of the Draeger
teams from Cape Breton Isle.
Rescued, the mine owners offered no apology or any compensation.
Nothing, nothing, nothing!
Crushed bones and rivers of blood, the price of coal.
Milton P. Ehrlich