Wednesday, 18 March 2020

Covid-19


This poem is posted to mark the first day of the public closure of the National Coal Mining Museum of England.



There are no rats streaming off from rigged ships,
No bell clanging crier calling out the dead,
No trundling overburdened tumbrils led
By masked spectres as the malady grips.
No crosses daubed over doors, though handles
And handshakes could prove fatal. Fast as fear
This plague flies, a traveller’s souvenir
Round the carousel of the world, dandles
Life and death without intent or purpose
Other than its own being. City shaken,
Markets deserted and futures tumbling.
The preachers of profit are at a loss,
While pubs are closing, last orders taken.
Lock all the doors…but the walls are crumbling.

                                                                           Dave Alton

Wednesday, 26 February 2020

Spectrum of Welfare




The following poems have been composed from phrases contributed by visitors to the National Coal Mining Museum of England. All were collected on one day, 19th February 2020, and drawn from information boards displayed around “The Hub”. The contributors were invited to write their chosen lines by selecting a coloured pen. The subsequent poems have been made from words written in the same colour. All the words used are those supplied by the visitors. My role has been to form them into reflective verse. I have retained mis-spellings and non-sequiturs as they contribute to the sense of the poems.
(Dave Alton – Coalshed Poet)
Red

I can’t tell a lie,
We were working on a seam:
Canary – Gas – Cage.

We are awkward, hard to use,
Dust made people hard to breath.

To pass a message
On eye-catching equipment:
Banners at a cost.

Explosion of welfare schemes,
Family in rescue teams.

Orange

Kept two canaries,
Two steel doors. Amazing days
Working on a seam.

It’s time to celebrate-
Wrestling, boxing, colliery bands.

Banners promote pride
And children-s entertainment
For use underground.

Danger still in existence,
Fun activities also.

Pink

What does remind you?
A mine? The helmet? Banners?
Colours and mottoes,

Gala days, celebrating
Once the most dangerous job.

Time improved greatly,
Family and friends rescue pride:
If bird feints – gas leak!

Coal mining was explosive,
Smoke disaster over years.

Green

Encourage miners
Struggle for gala of change;
Everythink proto.

Equipment, holiday silent,
Built family, love and friendship.

Turquoise

Join colliery bands,
Once the most dangerous job
Still chirping away.

Games in London used to ruffle,
Creating cuts and bruises.

Purple

Friends, smoke and helmets,
Draped in black to mark a death
Behind pit banner.

A very dangerous job,
Disasters still in existence.

Deadly days happened,
A colliery incident,
Gala team performed.

Celebrating time rescue,
Trained bands in the museum.

Black

All of a sudden
Everything deadly silent,
Danger with the lads.

Colliery bands were waiting
With family and friends by hell.

A sudden something,
Working a seam a yard high:
One hour in you knew.

Men in black killed or injured,
Thousands, I’ve cried, carried out.

We would rush for help,
All named still in existence
Until formal death.

Coal mining is dangerous,
But safety rules made us think.

Unusual happened.
Volunteers seriously
Went about today

To really mark areas
That mine inspectors once saw.

Friday, 7 February 2020

Telling Stories



Telling Stories
(Poem composed from conversations with visitors to the National Coal Mining Museum on 5th February, National Story Telling Day)

(1)
Granddad was from Fife,
Miner all his working days,
Mainly in Stoke, though.

Dad escaped in a spitfire
And I live now in Salisbury.

(2)
“Children, whose bag’s this,
And where is your group leader?
That’s it, two by two.”

Crocodile slouching its way
To the coach in neat order.

(3)
Thirteen’s old enough
For the joinery shop:
Time served and ready.

When the kids came, where’s the brass?
From rip saw then to ripper.

(4)
Saturday scrum-halves,
From pit props to prop forwards,
All in the same league.

Come Monday, under the sports’ field,
Players back at their tackle.

(5)
My brothers went down,
Dad, of course, and my uncles.
I went to college.

Gran gave me ten bob each week,
“Just ‘til you’re working.” she’d say.

Dave Alton
(Coalshed Poet)



Thursday, 31 October 2019

Spirits of Caphouse


(For Halloween)


Silent showers speak,
Disembodied voices call…
Old soap! Ghostly poo!

Autumn draft or cold breath,
Door on history left ajar.

Scent of carbolic,
Singing round the bath house,
Rose just passing through.

There’s dirty side and clean side,
Old miner’s other side now.

Tin bath of coal dust,
Hot water and open fires:
No money, no soap.

Words, like lives, pass in spirit:
Scares! Blood! Coughing! Screaming!

Zombie pit pony
Hurries a tub of shadows,
Dark into darkness.

Souls left to wander alone;
How lost when the lamp goes out.

Look! Look! A huge rat!
How scary then is the thought,
What size is the cat?

What is there to be scared of?
“The Deputy!” A collier quips.

Scatter of ashes,
Last words, lost mates, list of those
Beyond the echo.

Spirits abide in the coal-black,
Voices creaking like timbers.

(This poetry chain was composed by Dave Alton of Coalhouse Poets using words and phrases contributed by visitors to the Bath House and the underground tour at Caphouse Colliery, National Mining Museum of England.)





Wednesday, 30 October 2019

Bluecap




Should you stray down a mine, deep underground,
Listen! Listen! What’s that noise? What’s that sound?
A distant knock, knock, knocking, tap! Tap! Tap!
That’s no miner mining, it’s Bluecap!
Bluecap is a goblin, size of a child,
With an old wrinkled face, white whiskers and wild,
Wild eyes burning with blue fire that can see
Into the future, what’s going to be.
A flood? A cave-in? Gas ready to blow?
Listen for the warning, Bluecap will know.
A rap, rap, rapping and he’s trying to say,
Danger! DANGER! Time to be away!
Back to the surface and best not be slow
For there’s trouble coming down, down below.
He might sound like someone most folk would thank,
Except for his mischief, he enjoys a prank.
Tools go missing, so does the miners’ snap
And colliers will say, “That’s Bluecap!”
If there’s a full coal tub that’s been left alone
A blue flame might appear, then all on its own
That tub moves and to the shaft finds its way,
And Bluecap will expect a putters pay
Left in some quiet spot to settle the debt;
No pitman would want Bluecap being upset.
So, if you happen to be underground
And see a few coins left lying around,
Let them be, even though no one’s about,
Or Bluecap may stop you finding your way out.
Has it become hotter, the air turned stale?
Your lamp begins to flicker and fail.
Listen! Listen! There’s a crack! There’s a groan!
And you’re in the dark, down there, on your own.
You could try shouting, but no one hears you,
There’s a shuffling sound as something nears you,
Then, in the dark, a feint blue light shines through;
That will be Bluecap, he’s coming…FOR YOU!

Dave Alton




Tuesday, 1 October 2019

Tommy the Trapper




My name is Tommy, I’m just six years old,
I work in the dark and the damp and the cold
Underground in a coal mine, down, down deep,
Twelve hours a day and not a minute’s sleep.
Twelve hours a day with a rope in my hand,
Sat in a tunnel that’s too low to stand,
I listen for a knock, then know what to do,
Pull on the rope, let the coal tub through.
There’s a trapdoor close by here where I sit,
A trapdoor I have to make sure is kept shut.
Beyond it, leading away from my place,
Another tunnel runs up to the coal face
Where my dad kneels with his pick cutting coal,
My mum just behind him shovelling it all
Into tubs for my sisters, ten and nine
To push and pull the length of the mine,
To the shaft bottom from where, at a shout,
Some folks up top will haul it all out.
It’s important that once I’ve let a tub pass
The trapdoor swings shut because of the gas.
There’s fire damp and choke damp, so grown-ups say,
We need the fresh air to blow them away.
For six days a week it’s here that I sit,
Tommy the Trapper, the lad down the pit.

                                                                                                                 Dave Alton

Monday, 8 July 2019

A Life Amongst Diamonds




Not brittle or smooth
and resistant to a hit
the rock was a block

Water flows through the valley
crashing into the edges

Strong, tough, working hard
firm, fierce or so it seems
rock solid brave, thick

The keeper of history
a look into the pastime

A wonderland of
light, shimmering wealth that
comes from underground

Washing away sadness shown
making dark struggles unknown

Treasure hidden here
and me, yes you can looker
hide me again for someone

Caphouse pit baths are old 
quiet still, like never before

Diamonds are forever
not for Christmas or birthdays
a miner I am not, luckily


This poetry chain was created on the Caphouse site
Of National Mining Museum for England. It is the product
Of a writing workshop held there on Sunday, 7th July 2019.