King Coal : a Novel by Upton Sinclair
page 79 of 480 (16%)
page 79 of 480 (16%)
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man trapped like that, gasping, his eyes almost popping out of his head.
Fortunately he was a young fellow, and had no family. Hal asked what they would do with the body; the answer was they would bury him in the morning. The company had a piece of ground up the canyon. "But won't they have an inquest?" he inquired. "Inques'?" repeated the other. "What's he?" "Doesn't the coroner see the body?" The old Slovak shrugged his bowed shoulders; if there was a coroner in this part of the world, he had never heard of it; and he had worked in a good many mines, and seen a good many men put under the ground. "Put him in a box and dig a hole," was the way he described the procedure. "And doesn't the priest come?" "Priest too far away." Afterwards Hal made inquiry among the English-speaking men, and learned that the coroner did sometimes come to the camp. He would empanel a jury consisting of Jeff Cotton, the marshal, and Predovich, the Galician Jew who worked in the company store, and a clerk or two from the company's office, and a couple of Mexican labourers who had no idea what it was all about. This jury would view the corpse, and ask a couple of men what had happened, and then bring in a verdict: "We find that the deceased met his death from a fall of rock caused by his own fault." (In one case |
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