Going Deeper

“The first time I walked into a mine, I wanted to turn around and get out. But that wasn’t really an option, so I just kept going deeper and deeper into the mine. And I kept saying, couldn’t we just turn around? But ah, it didn’t work out that way.”
— Edison Peña, one of 33 Chilean miners rescued after 69 days trapped in a copper mine, during an interview with David Letterman. Peña, who sang Elvis Presley songs in the mine to lift the spirits of the other miners, was rewarded with a visit to Elvis' Graceland in Memphis in January.

Unearth
What we call poor must be more than a little red silt collected
in the lungs, a harder kind of breathing. The men in the mines
listen—their questions, the private ones they keep buried deeper
than the shafts they sweat in, are answered only by their own voices,
echoing back at them, the nervous laugh at a blue remark,
reverberating through tunnels. Instead of a bird, yellow
singing captive and sad in lamp-lit darkness, someone
has brought his dog, a dirty white muzzle lying mostly in sleep.
When the mutt sits up, barks at the flickering of shadows
on stone walls, hacked and jagged, it’s not annoyance the men feel,
but relief. They pause to gawk at the yellow teeth, to stare into
the well of open mouth, to mutter, to close their eyes and watch
their women. They remember the breasts beneath the blouses,
hands washing fine baby hair, cradling a soft skull, fingers
dipping dishes into water, pulling shreds of meat from bones, peeling skin
from fruit so much sweeter in absence, palms warming to cheek,
chest, ridge of hipbone, all that touching. When the dog, the last
huff and grumble of the dog, go dormant, the men turn back into
their back-breaking work. One man hands a tool to another.
The only human sounds breaching the damp air, ringing above
the clanking and wheeling, are words. Is this what you wanted?

___________________

From BBC News, October 14, 2010the disaster that has gripped audiences globally also serves as a reminder of the dangers of working in a mine. . . . estimates suggest such accidents kill about 12,000 people a year.” 
Dogs have been used in mines around the world, as
working animals pulling coal cars, controlling rodents,
helping in rescues, and sometimes as companions.
“. . . the mentality is that life is cheaper . . . no-one is going to kick up a fuss if they lose a few lives. People are not able to speak freely. If you make a nuisance then you won't have a job, — Alan Baxter, a Fellow of the Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining

Comments

  1. Reading your poem made me feel like I was there in that dark cave feeling the humidity and loneliness.

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