“When
I arrived upon the diggings, and beheld the beautiful grazing country torn up…
hillocks
of dug up earth the size of houses…the strange sight made me feel quite
wretched.
William Collins Maitland Mercury 16
May 1872.
All roads lead from Gulgong or Tambaroora
Weighed down with logs, the bullock drays pass
ploughing a path from the fields, leave behind
bare scrub, stumpy roots. A wash of mud
A digger joins the thousand at the miner’s camp
Pitches a tent, strips bark from gums on the creek
Slab by slab he builds a shack, pays half a quid
for a Miners’ Right to work on Crown Land
Sluices the clay with other men, leaves gravel
and sand, tailings piled high on
‘the lead’
Works for low wages when his luck runs out
winching at a mine-head for a wealthy gent
He buys a native possum cloak, from some
bloke
he met, traded who know where for who knows
what. A nobody who watched the white man
clear the land, graze white sheep. Dig up
his ancient streams for a glitter or gleam
A golden magic, stirring men to frenzy
after Miner’s camp Hill End - a2822650