Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
Poems of Tragedy: XIII. AmericaRamon
Bret Harte (18361902)D
Prone and sprawling on his face,
More like brute than any man
Alive or dead,—
By his great pump out of gear,
Lay the peon engineer,
Waking only just to hear,
Overhead,
Angry tones that called his name,
Oaths and cries of bitter blame,—
Woke to hear all this, and waking, turned and fled!
Cried Intendant Harry Lee,—
Harry Lee, the English foreman of the mine,—
“Bring the sot alive or dead,
I will give to him,” he said,
“Fifteen hundred pesos down,
Just to set the rascal’s crown
Underneath this heel of mine:
Since but death
Deserves the man whose deed,
Be it vice or want of heed,
Stops the pumps that give us breath,—
Stops the pumps that suck the death
From the poisoned lower level of the mine!”
From the shaft rose up on high;
And shuffling, scrambling, tumbling from below,
Came the miners each, the bolder
Mounting on the weaker’s shoulder,
Grappling, clinging to their hold or
Letting go,
As the weaker gasped and fell
From the ladder to the well,—
To the poisoned pit of hell
Down below!
Cried the foreman, Harry Lee,—
Harry Lee, the English foreman of the mine,—
“Brings them out and sets them free,
I will give that man,” said he,
“Twice that sum, who with a rope
Face to face with death shall cope:
Let him come who dares to hope!”
“Hold your peace!” some one replied,
Standing by the foreman’s side;
“There has one already gone, whoe’er he be!”
Pulling on the rope, and saw
Fainting figures reappear,
On the black ropes swinging clear,
Fastened by some skilful hand from below;
Till a score the level gained,
And but one alone remained,—
He the hero and the last,
He whose skilful hand made fast
The long line that brought them back to hope and cheer!
At the feet of Harry Lee,—
Harry Lee, the English foreman of the mine;
“I have come,” he gasped, “to claim
Both rewards, Señor,—my name
Is Ramon!
I ’m the drunken engineer,—
I ’m the coward, Señor—” Here
He fell over, by that sign
Dead as stone!