Many people blame those with the money and power, The Man, for their lot in life, blaming the rich and powerful of hiding the Stash so they can’t have a piece of it. What if The Man was hiding the Stash in plain sight, under the cool green grass of the Mall? And what if someone, an old prospector say, had a, you know, map?
He shambled slowly down the street,
His shoulders bent from years of toil
His burro stolid, laden down
With picks and pans and sacks of meal
Some passersby inclined to greet
Were startled at the quick recoil
The little man was new to town
He didn’t know the rites, the deal
Onto the Mall he made his way
And pitched his tent upon the grass
His burro dumbly stood beside
Eyes closed, awaiting what would be
His pick and shovel quiet lay
He’d rest and let the dull pains pass
He knew good luck would soon betide
His map was good as map could be
The Mall police approached him then
With friendly voices, friendly mien
And asked what was he doing there
With tent and burro, picks and pans
He said politely to the men
That he was there the gold to glean
The Stash was here, he’d have his share
The gold was his if any man’s
They cuffed him then with hearty laughs
And led the burro to a van
The tent and shovels in a truck
The crowd that gathered stiff and still
The newsmen wrote some paragraphs
And then forgot the little man
A little tetched, down on his luck
And yet a man of iron bound will
For even though the Stash be not
Beneath the Mall’s expansive sward
The man was certain that somewhere
The Man had laid the Stash to hide
The good life from him and his lot
And keep him and his kind as ward
Of all his betters, those who care
And much despise those they deride
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