
A gritty, first‑person memoir brings the world of 19th‑century coal mining to life through the eyes of someone who entered the pits at twelve and spent a lifetime beneath the earth. The narrator’s voice is plain yet powerful, shaped by hard labor, community bonds, and an unflinching pride in a trade passed down through generations. Listeners will hear the rhythm of daily work and the quiet dignity of a life built on the seam.
The opening scene unfolds in a modest kitchen, where a miner’s wife knits by lamplight while worrying over her husband’s recent injury and the looming poverty of a “two‑and‑sixpenny winter.” Through vivid dialogue and sensory details—the ticking clock, the smoke‑filled air, the clatter of wool—she embodies the resilience and desperation of families caught in economic turmoil. The narrative captures both the tender moments of domestic life and the harsh realities of a community on the brink.
Beyond the household, the memoir offers an insider’s view of the mines, the camaraderie among workers, and the evolving roles that come with experience, such as becoming the checkweigher. It’s an intimate portrait of endurance, offering listeners a window into a vanished world where loyalty to the underworld was both a burden and a badge of honor.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (488K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-03-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1880–1954
Drawn straight from life underground, his fiction brings the toughness, poverty, and solidarity of mining communities vividly to the page. He also spent decades in public life, moving from the pits to trade union work and the British Parliament.
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