De Re Metallica

Title

De Re Metallica

Subject

Coal Mining Exhibit

Description

Bond poem, Horrell photo, Martell background

Creator

David Bond, Beth Martell, Doc Horrell

Source

The Light That Shatters Darkness Exhibit

Publisher

Special Collections Research Center, Morris Library, Southern Illinois University Carbondale

Contributor

Special Collections Research Center, Morris Library, Southern Illinois University Carbondale

Rights

Use Restrictions: To quote in print, or otherwise reproduce in whole or in part in any publication, including on the World Wide Web, any material from this collection, the researcher must obtain permission from (1) the owner of the physical property and (2) the holder of the copyright. Persons wishing to quote from this collection should consult Special Collections Research Center to determine copyright holders for information in this collection. Reproduction of any item must contain the complete citation to the original.

Format

Text, JPG photograph

Language

English

Type

Poetry, photography

Identifier

Exhibit Window #11

Original Format

Photograph of miner's worn, discarded leather glove

Text

De Re Metallica

I remember listening that night
to the talk of mining accidents only
in driblets of sentences like the rain
depending from each scored hard hat
which was the reason they'd gathered
just inside the tin-roofed warehouse
before a wire screen separating
them from me, union from company,

hearing only half of what was said
above the tattoo of falling water, the f-word
exploiting every possible part of speech
as I fetched each one his or her particular
supply or tool or repair component--
tape measure, shop towel, ball joint--
it didn't matter, the company had
plenty of money and didn't care who

got exactly what so long as they kept
working seven-day shifts, and anyway
I was thinking of this girl I'd met while
taking classes at SIU, a chemistry major
actually, writing her master's thesis on
shellac, its origin and applications, a
practical girl for sure, intelligent and
at the same time pneumatic, callipygian,

which is a word I've yearned to use in
a poem for some time, a word I dared not
speak in a world where limericks were
high art yet poetry blinked back from darkness
and we all felt it, nudge of memory slippery
as gear grease, so I was trying real hard to
compose a verse that might appeal to such
a young lady, and I guess I just didn't

give it much thought at the time, being
busy gathering up supplies and deciding
how best to compare the glazed beauty
of a mound of discarded coal in the rain
to a woman's eyes, but now I recall quite
clearly an elderly miner's story of his
best friend's decapitation by means of the
sudden explosion of a 7200 volt electrical

line and its subsequent whipping about,
the way white rockdust churned,
cabletracks spitting into the blind walls,
the smell of lightning and melted rubber,
a prayer for God's ruthless compassion.

Files

The Light That Shatters Darkness #8.jpg

Citation

David Bond, Beth Martell, Doc Horrell, “De Re Metallica,” SCRC Virtual Museum at Southern Illinois University's Morris Library, accessed April 19, 2024, https://scrcexhibits.omeka.net/items/show/53.

Comments