Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Henry Phipps by Edgar Lee Masters
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Henry Phipps

    By Edgar Lee Masters



        I was the Sunday-school superintendent,
        The dummy president of the wagon works
        And the canning factory,
        Acting for Thomas Rhodes and the banking clique;
        My son the cashier of the bank,
        Wedded to Rhodes, daughter,
        My week days spent in making money,
        My Sundays at church and in prayer.
        In everything a cog in the wheel of things - as - they-are:
        Of money, master and man, made white
        With the paint of the Christian creed.
        And then:
        The bank collapsed.
        I stood and hooked at the wrecked machine -
        The wheels with blow-holes stopped with putty and painted;
        The rotten bolts, the broken rods;
        And only the hopper for souls fit to be used again
        In a new devourer of life,
        When newspapers, judges and money-magicians
        Build over again.
        I was stripped to the bone, but I lay in the Rock of Ages,
        Seeing now through the game, no longer a dupe,
        And knowing "'the upright shall dwell in the land
        But the years of the wicked shall be shortened."
        Then suddenly, Dr. Meyers discovered
        A cancer in my liver.
        I was not, after all, the particular care of God
        Why, even thus standing on a peak
        Above the mists through which I had climbed,
        And ready for larger life in the world,
        Eternal forces
        Moved me on with a push.



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