Tami Carter
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West Virginia Walks Out

9/10/2013

1 Comment

 
The world was wild then: 52, a snake of a road, 
the only artery into the heart of the coal fields. 
I knew then that beneath the earth's green top, 
the black world teamed--man and machine
tunneling  coal seams under our feet. 
Back then, they dug in--today, 
they take the mountain off.

I don't know what any of this means, 
but 25 years later, out on the continent's edge, 
I'm dreaming of black water run-off, the day
my father scorched the lawn with weed killer
he'd brought home from the mines
that the EPA had banned. I remember
the goiter man at Warden's market, 
the hermit across the road who hung 
his winter coat in the trees come spring.

My world was hollers and hills, sinkholes
in the grove beyond the garden gate. My father 
dusty with coal dirt, worked the Long Wall 
despite the UMWA strike, the snipers perched 
high and dry on the ridge above. We sang
Bluegrass  each Sunday in the choir, 
and Tess, the Tupperware lady, testified.
We ate dandelion greens from the yard; 
My Nana made Sassafras tea. And the only
exotic place anyone had ever been was Vietnam.

The pundits on TV say Appalachia's 
moved north, west. It isn't the south
anymore. My brother says I've been gone 
too long, it's left me. He tells me 
West Virginia's walked out, but he's too young
to remember the world before government
cheese, the childhood threats of deportation
to Prunytown, Uncle Billy's sermons 
on the true trinity of God, the union 
and the Democratic machine.

Today, the mines are sealed with water,
not coal, and men sit idle at the abandoned
Exxon. They watch weeds grow
and know the forested hills hide illegal crops.
Their sons are in the army or the guard, working 
at Walmart or the local car lot. They remember, 
but their children don't. Once coal was king --
the imperfect world where men sunk
each morning into earth and emerged
each evening  with the riches of black gold. 
Those days, the union saved, and the ridges
sprouted houses , swimming pools. 
We lived like Hollywood then--materialism, 
God's gracious gift.

--Tami Carter


1 Comment
Kenneth Pope link
11/13/2022 02:23:53 pm

Low offer scene would away whom down. None too run change market. Their material behavior home item.

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    Tami Carter 
    (Also, Tami Sriram)

    Southern Expat. World Traveler. Lover of Bourbon. Recovering Poet. Writer. Public School Mom. Wife. 

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