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[XXI. For gold you did your treacherous deed]
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46

[XXI. For gold you did your treacherous deed]

For gold you did your treacherous deed,
Mere money was your aim and end;
To selfish lust you gave good heed,
And turned against your helpless friend.
The only chance fate e'er bestowed,
Where power was given you to repay,
In scanty weight, the debt you owed,
Your craft used only to betray.
The vilest baseness of your kind—
The miser's greed, the coward's fear—
I grant your nature, yet I find
Nowhere in human kind your peer.
Since the world's history began,
No record stands of one who sold
So broadly, in the face of man,
His buried friend for dirty gold.

47

Poor Judas, for his thirty pence,
A living victim dared to sell;
And when he saw the consequence,
Fell riven with the pangs of hell.
But to the treachery of the Jew
You join the dastard, and instead
Of bartering with your sordid crew
For one alive, you sell the dead.
Is gold to conscience bolt and bar,
Against all entrance sound and firm?
I fear it cannot heal the scar
Gnawed through by the undying worm.
No man will envy you your prize;
I hold the treasure dearly bought;
I only see before your eyes
A bag of gold, a hell of thought.