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        <title><![CDATA[@Ralph Jones - blog]]></title>
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        <link>http://americymrunet.jamroomhosting.com/ralph-jones</link>
        <lastBuildDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 00:00:52 +0100</lastBuildDate>
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                <title><![CDATA[The industrial revolution (a child’s view) ©R.K.Jones2193 - @ralph-jones]]></title>
                <link>http://americymrunet.jamroomhosting.com/ralph-jones/blog/5312/the-industrial-revolution-a-childs-view-crkjones2193</link>
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                <description><![CDATA[<br><br>
Can you possibly imagine, being no more than a child?<br>To be pulled from your bed, and dragged off to work as you cried<br>At an age where all you want to do is play<br>Not to be dragged down a coal mine, for a pittance of pay<br>
Used in seams so damp, wet and narrow<br>Where even the pit ponies wouldn’t go<br>Crawling on your hands and knees, harnessed like an animal<br>Soaking with sweat, clothes ripped to shreds. Is this natural?<br>
Or left all alone for hours on end, guarding the ventilation doors!<br>Alone, for ten hours or more?<br>In the darkness, silence and gloom, the time seems endless<br>The cold, biting into the young bones, terrified, scared witless<br>
Childhood, the most important years!<br>They should be cherished, not sent down a mine in tears<br>Shackled to a coal haulage implement, in places so wet and so low<br>Clinging on with fingers bruised and bleeding, scared to let go<br>
Some working fourteen hours a day, seeing very little day light<br>Dragged off to work in the middle of the night<br>Coming home, sometimes with little to eat or a place to bathe!<br>Their young lives passing them by, to the mines they were slaves<br>
The coal mines, where the word safety didn’t exist<br>Many of the children, to be put on an early deceased list<br>Children taken to the mines by their father<br>Fathers mostly unable to read or write, never knowing any better<br>
The families were all very poor<br>If they don’t work, no money was coming through the door<br>Sometimes the whole family went to work in the mines!<br>Still they barely survived, even when their money was combined<br>
The younger children who worked there<br>Would be pushing the heavy wooden tubs of coal, often in pairs<br>Back breaking work for those so young<br>Pushing heavy tubs of coal to pit bottom, not out playing having fun<br>
The hurriers harnessed to the tubs, like small pit ponies<br>Thrusters, pushing from behind, children hands so small and bony<br>Children, many catching illness’s, they were unable to be saved<br>These children, who had no childhood, destined for an early grave<br>
A life where puberty can be thwarted<br>Legs, knees, spines and feet horribly distorted<br>Girls, who develop pelvic deformities<br>That could later life cause childbearing difficulties?<br>
Collapse of the digestive organs was also common<br>Diseases of the heart, causing inflammation<br>Stomach pains, cramps, diarrhoea and vomiting<br>Caused by contaminated water drinking<br>
Those who were lucky enough to survive, by God’s grace<br>Would be sent to work in the coal face<br>Working with a candle or a safety lamp<br>Hot, cramped, squalid conditions, many perishing with the firedamp<br>
Firedamp or methane, call it what you may<br>No taste, no smell, but in a flash, it would take you away The<br>silent killer, always lurking in the coal mines<br>No mercy, no warning, not understood in Victorian times<br>
So, as you watch your children playing happily in the sun<br>Try to imagine these children, lives over barely before it’s begun<br>Sitting in the cold and the damp, behind wooden doors<br>Dark, dinghy, foul smelling, sitting on a sodden dirty floor<br>
Waiting all day in the dark, as a door keep<br>Frightened to fall asleep<br>If they did, they may be beaten, and their meagre pay docked<br>Just sitting in the boredom, waiting for the door to be knocked<br>
Victorian times, where the factories were flourishing<br>Where the workers were like slaves, working for next to nothing<br>Those days, when there was no such thing as electricity<br>Where coal was a much sought-after commodity<br>
And the mine owners were quick to see<br>Give the parents a job, the children work almost free!<br>The mine owners generating vast wealth<br>Not caring about the worker’s health<br>
Uneducated people to them, only fit to work underground<br>Cheap labour to them, with very little work to be found<br>Except the mines and the factories, all owned by the paymasters<br>Living in depressing squalor. The paymasters houses full of laughter<br>
Where children on the Sunday, the Lords day, day of rest<br>Would stay in their beds, not go out to play, they had no energy left<br>The modern day mines we thought, were hard and uncompromising<br>Nothing like the Hell these children endured, not living, just existing<br>
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                <pubDate>Mon, 23 Nov 2020 23:43:54 +0000</pubDate>
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                <title><![CDATA[The challenge ©R.K.Jones2193 - @ralph-jones]]></title>
                <link>http://americymrunet.jamroomhosting.com/ralph-jones/blog/5311/the-challenge-crkjones2193</link>
                <guid>http://americymrunet.jamroomhosting.com/ralph-jones/blog/5311</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[<br><br>
Sunday morning a day of solitude and creativity<br>Alone but not alone, at home with my privacy<br>I listen to a young woman’s voice<br>A rich mellifluous voice, in which many will rejoice<br>
I sit at my desk, filled with ineffable sadness<br>Trying to imagine people living in loneliness<br>People in a lonely uninhabited place<br>Where you can see the sadness in their face<br>
The young woman’s lyrical, melodic tone tells of isolation<br>Of people living in desperation<br>People who have to live alone in seclusion<br>Some mentally unstable, in a state of confusion<br>
Not seeing another person, since who knows when<br>Wondering if they will ever see someone again<br>The rich tone of her voice, mellow and euphonious<br>As the plight of confinement, reaches out to us<br>
Confinement that can lead to paranoid delusion<br>Clinical depression, anxiety and illusions<br>As the young woman continues to relate to us<br>An ineffable beauty descends upon us<br>
But these words of indescribable beauty<br>Are really a lament of brutal reality<br>Of how people are being let down<br>In our own cities and towns<br>
People, who are being forced to live in isolation<br>As a viral infection causes untold devastation<br>People who are being forced to self-isolate<br>Elderly people who need help, before it’s too late<br>
As I look at the images of masks and coffin lids<br>Again and again she talks of Covid<br>A virus causing people to isolate behind four walls<br>A virus that we must tackle, before it kills us all<br>
So, as the mellifluous voice may be sweet on the ear<br>It is also makes it ineffably clear<br>That if we don’t challenge this viral infection<br>We face the prospect of more solitude and isolation<br>
]]></description>
                <pubDate>Mon, 23 Nov 2020 23:39:55 +0000</pubDate>
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                <title><![CDATA[Our Hero - @ralph-jones]]></title>
                <link>http://americymrunet.jamroomhosting.com/ralph-jones/blog/5188/our-hero</link>
                <guid>http://americymrunet.jamroomhosting.com/ralph-jones/blog/5188</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[<br><br>
  For context / ar gyfer cyd-destun ( as though it were necessary)  <br>
   Coronavirus: Capt Tom Moore's NHS fundraiser hits £17m  <br>
<br><br>
   Our Hero ©R.K.Jones2193  <br>
  In this time of a global pandemic<br>  Can we take the time to thank a man, most heroic?<br>  A man, whose name you hear everywhere you go<br>  A man by the name of, Captain Tom Moore <br>
  Captain Tom as he is known, is a war veteran<br>  He is also almost a centurion<br>  A man who knows, of the horrors of war<br>  We can only imagine the things that he saw <br>
  But this incredible man<br>  Put all this behind him, and he hatched a plan<br>  His aim, a hundred laps of his garden to walk around!<br>  Before his 100th birthday, to raise a thousand pounds <br>
  A thousand pounds, which he would have called a success<br>  To donate to the brave and glorious NHS<br>  But what this man has achieved<br>  Has to be seen to be believed <br>
  Not in his wildest dreams<br>  Would Captain Tom imagine what his gesture would mean<br>  People took him to their hearts<br>  And his fundraising effort, people willingly took part <br>
  Soon, a thousand pounds was increased tenfold<br>  As the stories of his heroics in the media were told<br>  And soon the figures reached a million, and even more<br>  And the nation was all celebrating Captain Tom Moore <br>
  At ninety-nine years of age<br>  He is dominating the newspapers front page<br>  The hearts of our nation, he has won<br>  As he has turned his mission, into a phenomenon <br>
  A mission of mercy, for all to see<br>  He is now deservedly, an A-list celebrity<br>  And all this , with a smile on his face<br>  And our NHS, is now in a far better place <br>
  So, let us all salute Captain Tom Moore<br>  Our hero, who has raised millions galore<br>  A man, who in these darkest of days<br>  Looked this virus in the eye and led the way <br>
  Showing the spirit that that we all need right now<br>  The spirit that Captain Tom, is showing us how<br>  This man, our hero, so humble, so brave<br>  To our NHS it's more than money that he gave <br>
  In his bravery, he has given us hope, a reason to smile<br>  A reason to fight, and is doing it in style<br>  With his medals proudly worn over his left breast<br>  Medals awarded for his military quests <br>
  Is there room for one medal more?<br>  For the incredible Captain Tom Moore<br>  Although he may tell you it is not done for glory<br>  But in years to come, shall we ever forget his story <br>
  A hundred laps of his garden, all for a good cause<br>  And all because!<br>  He wanted to give something to charity<br>  Heroes like this, we seldomly see? <br>
  Now his self-imposed challenge, is over and done<br>  But the adulation of our hero has only just begun<br>  The champion of our nation, that must truly be understood<br>  If there is any justice or compassion, he must receive a Knighthood. <br>
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                <pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2020 00:23:47 +0100</pubDate>
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                <title><![CDATA[television interview - @ralph-jones]]></title>
                <link>http://americymrunet.jamroomhosting.com/ralph-jones/blog/4094/television-interview</link>
                <guid>http://americymrunet.jamroomhosting.com/ralph-jones/blog/4094</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[ralph jones on news week Wales Sunday 9th March 11.30 am]]></description>
                <pubDate>Sat, 08 Mar 2014 19:18:16 +0000</pubDate>
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                <title><![CDATA[the silent wheels - @ralph-jones]]></title>
                <link>http://americymrunet.jamroomhosting.com/ralph-jones/blog/3932/the-silent-wheels</link>
                <guid>http://americymrunet.jamroomhosting.com/ralph-jones/blog/3932</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[  wheels.jpg  Any ex pats involved in the 84/85 miners strike if there is the silent wheels might bring you a few memories.A comical and true version  ]]></description>
                <pubDate>Fri, 10 Jan 2014 16:31:38 +0000</pubDate>
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