The soil here is hard in summer
so I buried my father in a tomb of rocks,
a plot behind St. Catherine's church
to lay rest the gilded dreams of pitiable men.
With gold found to the North,
Quartzburg drove out its whores,
its foreigners and roughnecks.
Pa left every day to mine.
I'd follow him to the gulch,
my pan and shovel in hand,
a child devoted to riches.
The Mexicans often staged
bull and bear fights near the bar.
They kept a boy entertained
when there were no hangings to enjoy.
The Cantonese flooded the quarries,
working for less than the Whites.
My father would curse the Orientals,
yet came home reeking of opium.
A group of my friends and I
left to explore the creek.
The Chinaman kneeled there,
We mocked him, and pushed him,
I prodded him with my knife.
ricocheted off of a stone
Father clutching the noose.
that he be jailed and properly tried.
The lynch mob swiftly grabbed
the gleaner's exposed hand.
Father wrapped the collar
The horde yanked on the rope,
Chinaman dragged and choked,
his brains dashed upon the wall.
Soon all the gold mines dried
but that blood never did.
Red still stains the jail cell wall.
but I saw guilt in his eyes.
With all the riches spent,
yet I stayed to dwell here still.
When Father died of drink