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[XXIX. Let him who in my footsteps treads]
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64

[XXIX. Let him who in my footsteps treads]

Let him who in my footsteps treads
Be patient till the march is o'er,
Nor ask why 'round these brainless heads
I swing the hammer of old Thor.
It is the stigma of our land
That money is our only aim,
That all things bow to its command,
That wealth is rank, respect, and fame:
That where our native face is seen
This shameful passion shows its trace,
And hungry avarice makes keen
The sharpened features of our race:
That art is dead, religion dull,
Law idle, social virtue worse;
The sharper and the sharper's gull
Breed and divide a common curse.

65

Some truth is wrapped in many lies:
I hold it base the golden fool
Can win a reverence from our eyes,
And bear so absolute a rule.
Nowhere, between the frozen poles,
Is gold so reckoned in the count;
Nowhere the car of Mammon rolls
So crushing and so paramount.
I grant, the rogue who bears a brand,
Sometimes, may feel its fiery smart;
But yet the wealth in his command
Is flattered, as a thing apart.
It soothes the pangs of his disgrace;
It gives him power, if not respect:
With shouts we yield the rich man place,
But whisper of the rogue's defect.
The purse-proud scoundrels whom I strip,
Are bare that all may see them pass;
And when I wield my scornful whip,
Through them I castigate the class.

66

Perhaps, like Canute on the shore,
I bid the raging waves subside,
Half-conscious that the next fell roar
Will bury me beneath the tide.
Come what may come, the word is said;
For man's behoof my best I give:
The martyr's ring may fit my head,
I perish, but the word shall live.