Fay Slimm.

Reminders.

 

Rain-washed to fresh, Cornish air

smells of historic spoil.


Landscape to sigh for its bare
granite coastline can boil
with stormy anger at times
while between gales rocks bask
sun-baked for secluded miles.
Hinterland littered with shafts,
now leveled, age -old flat lodes
make for much visitor pleasure
along merry summertime stroll.

Paths used to heave carts heavy

with mine-waste boys\' backs bound

with thick ropes, worked-out pits

leave ghosts of the thousands

who met young ends, unfitted

for black hours in a hellish mouth.

They for a pittance kept bread
on home tables when not found
was fair living elsewhere.


Beauty abounds, yet tourists
who see through mine walls hear
calls of those souls trapped in
falls of earth, crying with fear.
Heartache dis-colours land\'s
heritage when much abuse
of bal-maids and lads leave sad
reminders of shifts\' ruthless
length, when weary to death
bare feet stumbled homeward
eyes half closed and foodless slept
clothed before starting again.


Hard were the days when rich grew

richer on backs of the poor.