August 03, 2021

23 Miners Dead at Century Mine

Thursday, March 22, 1906
No. 1 Shaft Mine
Century, West Virginia

The first trip out fetches ten men,

five alive, five dead.

None of the living look like Tata.

As Mama shadows the stretchers,

I clutch the sleeve of her dress.

Some women snatch at the sheets

covering the bodies, the faces

raw blurs of hair, blood, and bone.  

In the tipple office, 

where they row the bodies, 

a mine boss Mama knows 

shakes his head, Naw, he ain’t here. 

Later, twenty fire-blackened men 

crawl out of the smoky hole

into the chaos of wives and mothers,

their accent-slurred English giving way

to the comfort of Lithuanian, Polish, or Italian, 

until four more bodies. Then silence.

All night, we wait at the entrance of the shaft. 

After the parish priest recites De profundis,

he reminds us Christ rose from the depths

of the tomb. Me, I cannot comprehend.

I can only hope 

Jesus raises Tata like Lazarus.

Old women pray. Their rosaries 

dangle, weeping willow branches

beaded with frozen rain.

When a higher death toll is announced,

a newspaper reporter curses,

too late for the morning edition.

 

My head on Mama’s aproned lap, 

I smell the supper we will never eat

and fall asleep to a Polish lullaby.

Near dawn she wakes me,

tells me plain, the last trip brought up 

the last dead miner, the twenty-third, 

Tata’s favorite Psalm. I cry

when I imagine I see him walking

away, toward the valley of the shadow.

A company man tells Mama

to stop by the office for the insurance,

$100, minus store bills, rent, and burial. 

Uncle Michal rigs a hasty coffin

of spalted wormy elm planks 

yanked from a swaybacked barn. 

When my cousins set up the narrow box,

the sitting room becomes smaller.

When they bring in the body, I cannot breathe.

Mama prepares a basin of bathwater and lilac.

After washing Tata’s face,

the comb snarls, a briar in his matted hair.

I wash his hands best I can.

Under the nails, quarter moons of coal dust  

linger in endless eclipse.

On the porch, surviving miners huddle.

One by one they enter. I shake their hands,

large and hard as lumps of anthracite.

My older brother, Jozef, 

now the man of the house, offers whiskey

from a half-pint, half full.

When the mourners leave, Mama mopes 

by the casket, fussing with Tata’s clothes. 

After trimming the char, I lower the lamp wick.

Saturday, at the cemetery, rain 

and thirteen other gaping graves          

shorten the words spoken over Tata.

That evening, after Mama mends 

and hems all of his work clothes,

I scrub them on the washboard

and hang them on the line. 

Next morning, frost stiffens them 

like frightened scarecrows.

On Monday, Jozef quits school.

While Mama fixes breakfast, 

I pack him Tata’s lunch bucket.

The Century Coal Company is hiring.

 

donnarkevic, Rattle #72 (Summer 2021) 

No comments:

Post a Comment