The Poetry Corner

The Latest Chinese Outrage

By Bret Harte (Francis)

It was noon by the sun; we had finished our game, And was passin remarks goin back to our claim; Jones was countin his chips, Smith relievin his mind Of ideas that a straight should beat three of a kind, When Johnson of Elko came gallopin down, With a look on his face twixt a grin and a frown, And he calls, Drop your shovels and face right about, For them Chinees from Murphys are cleanin us out With their ching-a-ring-chow And their chic-colorow Theyre bent upon making No slouch of a row. Then Jones my own pardner looks up with a sigh; Its your wash-bill, sez he, and I answers, You lie! But afore he could draw or the others could arm, Up tumbles the Bates boys, who heard the alarm. And a yell from the hill-top and roar of a gong, Mixed up with remarks like Hi! yi! Chang-a-wong, And bombs, shells, and crackers, that crashed through the trees, Revealed in their war-togs four hundred Chinees! Four hundred Chinee; We are eight, dont ye see! That made a square fifty To just one o we. They were dressed in their best, but I grieve that that same Was largely made up of our own, to their shame; And my pardners best shirt and his trousers were hung On a spear, and above him were tauntingly swung; While that beggar, Chey Lee, like a conjurer sat Pullin out eggs and chickens from Johnsons best hat; And Batess game rooster was part of their loot, And all of Smiths pigs were skyugled to boot; But the climax was reached and I like to have died When my demijohn, empty, came down the hillside, Down the hillside What once held the pride Of Robertson County Pitched down the hillside! Then we axed for a parley. When out of the din To the front comes a-rockin that heathen, Ah Sin! You owe flowty dollee me washee you camp, You catchee my washee me catchee no stamp; One dollar hap dozen, me no catchee yet, Now that flowty dollee no hab? how can get? Me catchee you piggee me sellee for cash, It catchee me licee you catchee no hash; Me belly good Sheliff me lebbee when can, Me allee same halp pin as Melican man! But Melican man He washee him pan On bottom side hillee And catchee how can? Are we men? says Joe Johnson, and list to this jaw, Without process of warrant or color of law? Are we men or a-chew! here be gasped in his speech, For a stink-pot had fallen just out of his reach. Shall we stand here as idle, and let Asia pour Her barbaric hordes on this civilized shore? Has the White Man no country? Are we left in the lurch? And likewise whats gone of the Established Church? One man to four hundred is great odds, I own, But this yers a White Man I plays it alone! And he sprang up the hillside to stop him none dare Till a yell from the top told a White Man was there! A White Man was there! We prayed he might spare Those misguided heathens The few clothes they wear. They fled, and he followed, but no matter where; They fled to escape him, the White Man was there, Till we missed first his voice on the pine-wooded slope, And we knew for the heathen henceforth was no hope; And the yells they grew fainter, when Petersen said, It simply was human to bury his dead. And then, with slow tread, We crept up, in dread, But found nary mortal there, Living or dead. But there was his trail, and the way that they came, And yonder, no doubt, he was bagging his game. When Jones drops his pickaxe, and Thompson says Shoo! And both of em points to a cage of bamboo Hanging down from a tree, with a label that swung Conspicuous, with letters in some foreign tongue, Which, when freely translated, the same did appear Was the Chinese for saying, A White Man is here! And as we drew near, In anger and fear, Bound hand and foot, Johnson Looked down with a leer! In his mouth was an opium pipe which was why He leered at us so with a drunken-like eye! They had shaved off his eyebrows, and tacked on a cue, They had painted his face of a coppery hue, And rigged him all up in a heathenish suit, Then softly departed, each man with his loot. Yes, every galoot, And Ah Sin, to boot, Had left him there hanging Like ripening fruit. At a mass meeting held up at Murphys next day There were seventeen speakers and each had his say; There were twelve resolutions that instantly passed, And each resolution was worse than the last; There were fourteen petitions, which, granting the same, Will determine what Governor Murphys shall name; And the man from our district that goes up next year Goes up on one issue thats patent and clear: Can the work of a mean, Degraded, unclean Believer in Buddha Be held as a lien?