I came across a wonderful quotation today from Orwell's 
The Road to Wigan Pier:
In a way it is even humiliating to watch coal-miners working. It raises  in you a momentary doubt about your own status as an ‘intellectual’ and a  superior person generally. For it is brought home to you, at least  while you are watching, that it is only because miners sweat their guts  out that superior persons can remain superior. You and I and the editor  of the Times Lit.  Supp., and the poets and the Archbishop of Canterbury  and Comrade X, author of Marxism for Infants–all of us really owe the  comparative decency of our lives to poor drudges underground, blackened  to the eyes, with their throats full of coal dust, driving their shovels  forward with arms and belly muscles of steel.
Quoted by Harold Pollack, RBC
And this prompted me to search out my own very favorite paragraph from the book:
Even when you watch the process of coal-extraction you probably only watch it for a short time, and it is not until you begin making a few calculations that you realize what a stupendous task the 'fillers' are performing. Normally each man has to clear a space four or five yards wide. The cutter has undermined the coal to the depth of five feet, so that if the seam of coal is three or four feet high, each man has to cut out, break up and load on to the belt something between seven and twelve cubic yards of coal. This is to say, taking a cubic yard as weighing twenty-seven hundred-weight, that each man is shifting coal at a speed approaching two tons an hour. I have just enough experience of pick and shovel work to be able to grasp what this means.  When I am digging trenches in my garden, if I shift two tons of earth during the afternoon, I feel that I have earned my tea. But earth is tractable stuff compared with coal, and I don't have to work kneeling down, a thousand feet underground, in suffocating heat and swallowing coal dust with every breath I take; nor do I have to walk a mile bent double before I begin. The miner's job would be as much beyond my power as it would be to perform on a flying trapeze or to win the Grand National. I am not a manual labourer and please God I never shall be one, but there are some kinds of manual work that I could do if I had to. At a pitch I could be a tolerable road-sweeper or an inefficient gardener or even a tenth-rate farm hand. But by no conceivable amount of effort or training could I become a coal-miner, the work would  kill me in a few weeks.
 
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