The Miner Poem by Richard Provencher

The Miner



wears a cotton protective mask,
bleached cotton scraping
tenderness of skin

only twenty years old, man-child
sharing a paycheck with
mom and family

trudges two miles across quiet
streets, listens to the breath
of early morn, silence is

behind those windows, even
cars and bicycles
stationary in
layers of contentment

humming mine continues to draw
him into its yawn of smelter

tall stacks, molten copper awaiting
preparations of shaped moulds

splashing heat anxious to
become square-shaped anodes.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: work
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
This poem is about my first full time job in 1962 working at the Noranda Copper mine in Quebec. An experience from 2,500 ft underground on the rock crusher floor to the molten copper floor on the surface, experiences indeed.
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