During the strike, the ponies were brought up From their snug stables, some three hundred feet Below the surface- up the pit's main shaft Shot one by one into the light of day; And as each stepped, bewildered, from the cage, He stood among his fellows, shivering In the unaccustomed freshness of free air, His dim eyes dazzled by the April light. And then one suddenly left the huddled group, Lifted his muzzle, sniffed the freshness in, Pawed the soft turf and, whinnying, started trotting Across the field; and one by one his fellows With pricking ears each slowly followed him, Timidly trotting: when the leader's trot Broke into a canter, then into a gallop; And now the whole herd galloped at his heels Around the dewy meadow, hard hoofs, used To stumbling over treacherous stony tramways And plunging hock-deep through black steamy puddles Of the dark narrow galleries, delighting In the soft spring of the resilient turf, Still round and round the field they raced, unchecked By tugging traces, at their heels no longer The trundling tubs, and round and round and round, With a soft thunder of hoofs, the sunshine flashing On their sleek coats, through the bright April weather They raced all day: and even when the night Kindled clear stars above them in a sky Strangely unsullied by the stack which now No longer belched out blackness, still they raced, Unwearied, as through their short sturdy limbs The rebel blood like wildfire ran, their lungs Filled with the breath of freedom. On they sped Through the sweet dewy darkness; and all night The watchman at the pithead heard the thudding Of those careering and exultant hoofs Still circling in a crazy chase; and dawn Found them still steaming raggedly around, Tailing into a lagging cantering, And so to a stumbling trot: when gradually Dropping out one by one, they started cropping The dew dark tender grass, which no foul reek From the long idle pit now smirched, and drinking With quivering nostrils the rich living breath Of sappy growing things, the cool rank green
Grateful to eyes, familiar from their colthood
Only with darkness and the dusty glimmer Of lamplit galleries... May hap one day Our masters, too, will go on strike, and we Escape the dark and drudgery of the pit, And race unreined around the fields of heaven!