| Thomas R. Lounsbury, ed. (18381915). Yale Book of American Verse. 1912. |
| |
| Francis Bret Harte. 18391902 |
| |
| 203. Chiquita |
| |
| BEAUTIFUL! Sir, you may say so. Thar is n't her match in the county; | |
| Is thar, old gal,Chiquita, my darling, my beauty? | |
| Feel of that neck, sir,thar 's velvet! Whoa! Steady,ah, will you, you vixen! | |
| Whoa! I say. Jack, trot her out; let the gentleman look at her paces. | |
| |
| Morgan!She ain't nothin' else, and I 've got the papers to prove it. | 5 |
| Sired by Chippewa Chief, and twelve hundred dollars won't buy her. | |
| Briggs of Tuolumne owned her. Did you know Briggs of Tuolumne? | |
| Busted hisself in White Pine, and blew out his brains down in 'Frisco? | |
| |
| Hedn't no savey, hed Briggs. Thar, Jack! that 'll do, quit that foolin'! | |
| Nothin' to what she kin do, when she 's got her work cut out before her. | 10 |
| Hosses is hosses, you know, and likewise, too, jockeys is jockeys; | |
| And 't ain't ev'ry man as can ride as knows what a hoss has got in him. | |
| |
| Know the old ford on the Fork, that nearly got Flanigan's leaders? | |
| Nasty in daylight, you bet, and a mighty rough ford in low water! | |
| Well, it ain't six weeks ago that me and the Jedge and his nevey | 15 |
| Struck for that ford in the night, in the rain, and the water all around us; | |
| |
| Up to our flanks in the gulch, and Rattlesnake Creek just a bilin', | |
| Not a plank left in the dam, and nary a bridge on the river. | |
| I had the gray, and the Jedge had his roan, and his nevey, Chiquita; | |
| And after us trundled the rocks jest loosed from top of the cañon. | 20 |
| |
| Lickity, lickity, switch, we came to the ford, and Chiquita | |
| Buckled right down to her work, and, afore I could yell to her rider, | |
| Took water jest at the ford; and there was the Jedge and me standing, | |
| And twelve hundred dollars of hoss-flesh afloat, and a-driftin' to thunder! | |
| |
| Would ye b'lieve it? That night, that hoss, that ar' filly, Chiquita, | 25 |
| Walked herself into her stall, and stood there, all quiet and dripping: | |
| Clean as a beaver or rat, with nary a buckle of harness, | |
| Just as she swam the Fork,that hoss, that ar' filly, Chiquita. | |
| |
| That 's what I call a hoss! andWhat did you say?Oh! the nevey? | |
| Drownded, I reckon,leastways, he never kem back to deny it. | 30 |
| Ye see, the derned fool had no seat, ye could n't have made him a rider; | |
| And then, ye know, boys will be boys, and hosseswell, hosses is hosses! | |
|
|