The Dirt | Ditch | A Poem about Mill Race
Mom told us not to play in the creek by our house
The old ephemeral channel turned permanent ditch
The one dug by Chinese laborers in the 1850s
Put there on purpose for wealthy white men to run mills
And get even wealthier
Don’t go in there she would say
It’s dirty
It smells
And there was an old bum who crooned half-crazy songs
Part yelled, part mad
Fully sunk in sorrow of some lost life
But did mother listen to the song sparrow’s quilted call
Its notes sewn into a patchwork song?
In summer, the creek ran dry
Yellowed grocery bags gaped on nearby branches
Dirty laundry on a line
Fir tree needles and junkie needles
Thorned thickets of Himalayan blackberry
The crosshatch of willows on steep banks
In winter, water filled the trench
Slow and brooding
Skimmed by iridescent oil
Topped by torched-out ash leaves, unable to hold color
Then sometimes the water hurried by a storm
By concrete roads and driveways swooshing the rain in too fast
Cutting the channel down to the blue clay
Away from our feet and cares
Out of site, it can be so easy to ignore
In the creek by our house, we never touched the water
Or caught crawdads and periwinkles
Or followed the tracks of nutria
In the soft mud of this ditch dug on purpose
The absence of experience bears a
Stronger mark on my youth
Than a creek itself
Don’t go in there, mother’s words still echo
But not as strongly as the stalking curiosity
Of what might happen when I do.
They say there’s a Chinook in those still waters
They say the creek could be something more
And now as my child awaits the world
Born into the same place I grew up
By the ditch dug by Chinese laborers
What will I tell him?