Poetry

A Town Called Sheppton – Poetry by Mark Tulin

A Town Called Sheppton was first published in the now defunct Vita Brevis Press. Featured image from Pexels.com

A Town Called Sheppton by Mark Tulin

My neighbor worked in the mines
in a town called Sheppton,
where heaps of blackness
covered the valleys and canyons

He was an excavating hero,
a prince of the middle earth,
deep, down into a hole
where you could only see
the whites of his eyes

He held his lantern high,
searching through ungrateful caverns,
down an anonymous coal chute
where basement’s blackened
with anthracite coal

Tracks winding down
into the tunnels
where cries echo from lost souls
Men like my neighbor,
suffer from weary lungs,
lies and dirty faces.

Unknown's avatar

I am an author, poet, humorist, and short story writer living in Long Beach, California. I write about various topics, from my early childhood in Philadelphia to my years as a family therapist and finally to my soul-searching in California. These are poetic narratives that may have humorous or serious content or both. Either way, I hope my poetry and stories resonate with you. My books include Magical Yogis, Uncommon Love Stories, Awkward Grace, Junkyard Souls, and Rain on Cabrillo.

25 comments on “A Town Called Sheppton – Poetry by Mark Tulin

  1. Blogging_with_Bojana's avatar

    A great one, Mark. Loved it.

  2. V.'s avatar

    Beautiful photo 😊🌸

  3. Rosaliene Bacchus's avatar

    Thanks for shining a light on these lost souls upon which humanity’s progress was built.

  4. anne leueen's avatar

    You have captured the miner’s life in this.

  5. Jonathan Caswell's avatar

    Reblogged this on By the Mighty Mumford and commented:
    EXCELLENT POETRY WITH A SPECIAL INTEREST! CHECK IT OUT!

  6. Kally's avatar

    Beautifully captured, Mark.

  7. Tamara Yancosky - BBYCGN's avatar

    Amazing writing and photo!

  8. luisa zambrotta's avatar

    Great poem and beautiful image!!!

  9. hitandrun1964's avatar

    Truthful poem and so very sad.

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