THE MEANS OF HAPPINESS
By ODEAN – Part II
| When gold was all unknown, | |||
| Then honesty was the ‘rule, | |||
| Mean quirking tricks and dishonesty | |||
| Were left to the knave and fool. | |||
| But now, alas! alas ! | |||
| That the thirst and the lust for gold | |||
| Has rushed like a flood o’er the land, | |||
| And seized on the young and the old; | |||
| The poet’s eye can see | |||
| An envious cursed cloud, | |||
| A ghastly pall with a crimson stain, | |||
| Spread over the land like a shroud. | |||
| And under its baneful shade | |||
| Are sins as deep as hell, | |||
| There is envy and hate far, far beyond, | |||
| The power of my pen to tell. | |||
| Gold in a way may be good, | |||
| But gold is not all in all, | |||
| For God hath placed it under foot | |||
| And over it spread a pall. | |||
| Gold in a war may be good, | |||
| As the thunder and hail and snow; | |||
| It comes like the ‘breath of man, | |||
| And goes-ah! who can know? | |||
| Gold in a way may be good, | |||
| But wealth will not purchase rest, | |||
| Or take a poisoned pang from out | |||
| The tortured owner’s breast. | |||
| Remember the needle’s eye, | |||
| And remember once again | |||
| That treasures rust and corrupt, | |||
| And that manhood ends in pain. | |||
| Wake from your sordid dreams, | |||
| Poet and statesman and scribe, | |||
| Clergy and laity, all beware, | |||
| Beware of the glamorous bribe. | |||
| Riches, and wealth, and pomp, | |||
| And yellow glamour of gold, | |||
| Are but half the story of life, | |||
| The other is yet untold. | |||
