The Holding Breath
To the 204 men and boys of the 1862 Hartley Colliery disaster — their breath drifts still, coal-dust caught in morning’s blacklung frost. They crawled into the narrow seams where lanterns barely held back the dark, where the air strangled itself thin.
We remember the steel-to-stone rhythm of their pickaxes, the hunger-click of labour, the slow beat of defiance: Enough. No more. This is the debt of dignity owed to every working hand.
Coal ash on the tongue —
nothing left but breath and weight
where the blast once sang.
Written dVerse Poets Labour Day prompt. This haibun is based on the Hartley Colliery disaster (1862, Northumberland) — 204 men and boys died when the mine’s only shaft was blocked by a fallen beam. It led to the law requiring at least two separate exits in every mine.
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