Spill a little lighting for Ryan & Marcus, Natalie, &
my great grandfather. Spill
a little lightning for Tom & Jason & Joe & Teresa.
Graveyards round here full
of people cause there’s a thousand ways into the mine,
a thousand ways to be
killed in the mine, cause the American coal miner
can only be seen in light
when they’re dead. The only time the media has a big interest
is the day after & one day a hundred years will pass
& they wont even love nature anymore,
& they will say what we did to the natives was genocide
& they will say what we did to those cities was apartheid
& they will say what we did to Appalachia was colonialism,
we treated them as if not our people, but things
to bring ore up out of a mountain,
& one day they will use the word slave
& one day they will let Appalachian children speak for themselves
& one day they will let Appalachian children into colleges
& not ask them to denounce the place they came from
their culture, their religion, their hands,
& one day they will let Appalachian children speak
& the Appalachian children will say you can’t lose but so much blood,
then the body
shutting down; it was cheaper to destroy a mountain
than put up a man to work underground,
my brother’s body mangled in such a way,
every bone crushed, I could not recognize him,
that’s what they gave us back
of the miners up at Upper Big Branch,
Don Blankenship’s employees, they were our friends, beneath the surface.
They were brave men at work.
Provenence: Submission.
Keegan Lester is a writer splitting time between New York City and Morgantown West Virginia. His writing has appeared in The Boston Review, The Journal and The Academy of American Poets Poem a Day series among other places. His first book “this shouldn’t be beautiful but it was and it was all i had so i drew it” was selected by Mary Ruefle for the 2016 Slope Editions book prize.
Featured Image: By Lewis Hine (1874-1940) National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, Wikimedia Commons
Valena Beety
December 2, 2017 at 6:12 amYes and yes again.
Miriam Levering
December 5, 2017 at 5:48 amThat is a great, great poem!