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 Post subject: Mine Poems
PostPosted: Sat Jan 07, 2006 4:37 pm 
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Joined: Mon Jun 20, 2005 11:28 pm
Posts: 1758
Location: Winnemucca, NV
I created this topic because Del "Abe" Jones wrote in in response to the Sago Mine disaster. He wanted to submit his and his grandfather's poems. His grandfather worked underground, owning a coal mine in Colorado. He also was a superintendent of a few dam projects (Aqueduct, Hoover & Coulee) as well as diversion tunnels and tunneling. Read below.

THE WIDE CANYON TUNNEL CAVE-IN
(The story of an actual occurrence at Wide Canyon)

Standing grimly, dark mouth yawning;
Stretching far 'neath mountain's crest;
Days are marked by no bright dawning
Where the tunnel hides its breast.

Timbers large, great rocks upholding,
Steel and crown bars keyed and blocked;
Wedge and foot blocks hold unfolding,
Myst'ries Mother Earth has locked.

But as Nature, in great fury
At the secrets from her torn,
Manmade structures break and crumble;
Of their strength she shows her scorn.

Creak! Snap! Shouts! A roar! A grinding!
Dust and ground stench fill the air!
Strong men flee! A safe place finding,
From the dangers hidden there!

Lights are gone! The darkness smothers!
Matches flicker through the haze!
Names are called! Each thinks of others
As they stagger from the maze!

One man missing? Tom McColgan
Is he caught beneath that fall?
Was poor Tom buried as he ran?
Surely they could hear him call!

But at last there comes faint tapping,
From that fallen mass of ground!
Listen closely! Hear that rapping?
That's old Tom a moving 'round!

For Dame Nature, through some error,
Left a place for Tom to hide!
And though he was weak with terror,
Soon he crawled to the outside.

But this story has an ending,
Different far from one you've read,
With a cheerful color lending
To a tale of fearsome dread.

Tom lay dreaming of a cave-in,
In the quiet of his room,
When into his mind sub-conscious,
Came the rending crack of doom!

Slipped to floor from bedclothes, groaning;
Crawling there on hands and knees;
Frightened! Searching! Feeling! Moaning!
Lost in dreamland's mysteries.

Craw led three times 'tween chairs and table,
Bumped his head against the trunk!
Blindly searched for light or cable;
Even crawled beneath the bunk!

Found a hammer near the doorway,
Crashed his way through plaster wall!
And at last emerged in safety
In the dormitory hall!


THE HONOR ROLL

Here’s a toast to the army that built it,
To workers from river to town,
To the men and even the women
Who toiled, caring naught for renown.

To the men who were called foolish dreamers,
Or men who climbed mountains and vales
And traveled the drear, desert spaces,
0’er lonely and seldom trod trails.

To the supers, the walkers and shifters
Who urged as the battle was fought.
To the men who toiled in the headings,
To danger ne’er giving a thought.

To the draftsmen who just drew the pictures,
Or totaled the costs day by day;
To the men who planned and directed
The job as it moved on its way.

To the boys who pushed only the mucksticks;
To the crews who dished out the chuck;
To the men who kept the wheels rolling
In tunnels, in power house and truck.

To the men suff’ring pain, hurt or maiming;
Long hours behind hospital walls.
To the whiteclad doctors and nurses
Who eased other’s pain in their calls.

And a pause in the toast we are drinking,
With a prayer for pals who are gone,
That The Great Master Workman in Heav’n
Pays well for the job they have done!


SONG OF THE SHIFTER

Hustle the mucking! Come on with those cars!
Bar down! Lay the track! Get up the crownbars!
Bring in the jumbo! Set timbers and lag!
Airhose and water! Don’t let the job drag!
Machines on the crossbars! Tighten the clamps!
Get started drilling or we will be tramps!
Pull in that machine! Don’t break out too far!
Hurry up, Johnny! Who’s first off the bar?

Get hold of that blowpipe! Look out for the muck!
Move those lights back! Load dull steel on the truck!
Bring in the powder and tamp sticks and load!
Tie on the bus wires! Get out of the road!
Roll out with the jumbo! Lower the wings!
Not much to do—just a million odd things!
Plug in the cable and turn on the juice!
Hold tight a second until she cuts loose!

How goes the hour? Just a quarter past ten?
Get going, boys! Do it over again!
Back to the heading through smoke and the muck;
The best crew of men to drill and tend chuck!
I’ll push you and cuss, but you know the game!
Hurry and hustle! Each shift it’s the same!
We’ll show those Hoosiers and dumb scissor bills
How to drive tunnels ‘neath mountains and hills!


TEAMWORK ON THE AQUEDUCT

(The Miner’s Viewpoint.)

“Say, there ain’t much use in talkin’,”
Said the Gunner to the boss,
“Them engineers is nu’sances
An’ they sure would be a loss
If they had to drive a headin’
With a transit an’ a rod.”

“Guess we know which way we’re goin’,
Jest a candle an’ a sight;
We know when track ain’t level,
When the tunnel, it is tight
Without no guy in fancy pants
A measurin’ with a rod.”

“They jest stand around in bunches
With their pencils an’ it’s great,
How they tells us guys that knows how
How to drive the tunnels straight,
When they peek an’ point their fingers
Through a transit at a rod,”

(The Engineer’s Idea.)

“There are sometimes when I wonder ,”
Said the lanky engineer,
“Why those guys up in the headings
Have a job and labor here.
For they sure have missed their calling
Driving tunnel on a line.”

“If it wasn’t for my transit,
And me shooting line and grade,
They would wander through the mountains
Here and there without my aid,
And they’d pass the other heading
Somewhere east or west of here.”

“But with level and with transit
And a backsight and a rod,
I strive to keep the tunnel straight
I’m a sort of human god.
But it keeps our pencils busy
Helping miners hold their jobs.”


MONUMENTS

His monument stands in a city’s square,
Where the thousands who pass may read
Of a fortune made in the marts of trade
Or of wartimes’ valorous deed.
And the world is told of the great man’s worth,
As on brass is his graven name;
While the marble, fair, will long years stand there
As a mark of a great man’s fame.

My monument stands in the hills, away
From the rush of the speeding throng.
There are few who care as they wander there,
Of years that were weary and long.
But with pride I toiled in the tunnels, where
Hidden deep from the sight of man,
A battle was fought, a victory bought”
By those of that laboring clan.

And what has been cast through decades will last,
And I’ll know when my day is done,
My work there will tell that I builded well,
Though my name is not in its stone.
And monument fair, in the city’s square

Is worthless by mine it does seem,
While God’s blessings pour through the mountain’s bore
Each day in a thirst quenching stream.


EASY MONEY!

(Jack. Hill’s Rule For Digging Holes.)

Here’s a tale for the sons of old Erin,
Who have made the world brighter by far,
With the bits of their wit an’ their darin’
Than it could be from moonlight an’ star.

‘Twas a brave broth o’ man with the riggin’
Of a lineman with irons an’ straps,
By a bit of a hole he was diggin’
With a groundman’s mucksticks an’ his traps.

With a quirk of a smile said old “Top Deck,”
As he turned with a query to Jack,
“I’ll wager two bucks from my paycheck
I’ve a nut here that you cannot crack! “

“You’ve traveled the world! Learned the lineman’s game!
And you’ve clambered up many a pole;
But here is the bet! That you cannot name
The easy foot to dig of a hole! “

Just a split second Jack scratched at his pate,
Then he grinned with an Irishman’s might.
“Be Jabers! I’m thinkin’ ye’re badly bate!
If ye’ve dug holes ye’ll .know I’m dead right! “

“The top six inches av a hole is play
An’ I stop when the diggin’ gets tough;
Look down at the last six inches an’ say
‘Hell! Let ‘er go! She’s down dape enough!’ “


THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THEM

Two men came out to the job one day,
Both signed on at the same rate of pay;
Each was started at similar work,
Not hard enough for either to shirk.
Dick was a husky chap, so was Tim;
Able to work with vigor and vim.

Tim dug in with a swing and a lift,
Hustled his work throughout the whole shift,
Whistled a tune as the hours crawled by,
No task was set that he would not try.
Always took pride in a job well done,
Even worked harder if left alone.

Dick was a loafer; hated to toil;
Dodged any task where fingers could soil.
Spent half his time watching the boss.
Moved so slowly they thought he’d grow moss.
Ev’ry ten minutes looked at his watch,
Stalled along making good work a botch.

First in the mess hall; loudest to grieve;
Last on the job but first one to leave.
Talked of everything under the sun;
T old the world how the job should be run.
Strong to complain and wail at his plight;
Criticized men who tried to do right.

Tim climbed the ladder, earning more pay.
Dick drew a timecheck, went on his way.
These chaps you’ve seen, rubbed elbows with them;
With lessons taught by each of these men.
Work and hustle throughout the whole day;
It’s pluck, not luck, that gauges your pay!

From "THE AQUEDUCT"
Copyright 1936 by
Charles Francis Thomas, Jr. 1885 - 1973
Berdoo Camp, California


"Mankind's greatest accomplishment is not the revolution of technology, it is the evolution of creativity." copyright 1984 by Del "Abe" Jones
Please feel free to share poetry Ask your friends to visit my pages.

_________________
"If you thought old, abandoned mines were only in the west, then you haven't been to IronMiners.com!"


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Mon Jan 09, 2006 4:39 pm 
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Joined: Mon Jul 18, 2005 11:12 am
Posts: 385
You didn't find the MINER BOND POEM?
I'll will have to send it to you soon!


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Mon Jan 09, 2006 11:54 pm 
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Joined: Fri Jul 08, 2005 12:41 pm
Posts: 2919
Location: Hard coal region, PA

Fourty years I worked with pick and drill
Down in the mines against my will
The Coal King's slave - a thing of the past
Thanks be to God, I'm free at last....



---taken from a miner's headstone.


Banks


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