Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Price He Paid by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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The Price He Paid

    By Ella Wheeler Wilcox



    I said I would have my fling,
        And do what a young man may;
    And I didn't believe a thing
        That the parsons have to say.
    I didn't believe in a God
        That gives us blood like fire,
    Then flings us into hell because
        We answer the call of desire.

    And I said:    'Religion is rot,
        And the laws of the world are nil;
    For the bad man is he who is caught
        And cannot foot his bill.
    And there is no place called hell;
        And heaven is only a truth
    When a man has his way with a maid,
        In the fresh keen hour of youth.

    'And money can buy us grace,
        If it rings on the plate of the church:
    And money can neatly erase
        Each sign of a sinful smirch.'
    For I saw men everywhere,
        Hotfooting the road of vice;
    And women and preachers smiled on them
        As long as they paid the price.

    So I had my joy of life:
        I went the pace of the town;
    And then I took me a wife,
        And started to settle down.
    I had gold enough and to spare
        For all of the simple joys
    That belong with a house and a home
        And a brood of girls and boys.

    I married a girl with health
        And virtue and spotless fame.
    I gave in exchange my wealth
        And a proud old family name.
    And I gave her the love of a heart
        Grown sated and sick of sin!
    My deal with the devil was all cleaned up,
        And the last bill handed in.

    She was going to bring me a child,
        And when in labour she cried
    With love and fear I was wild -
        But now I wish she had died.
    For the son she bore me was blind
        And crippled and weak and sore!
    And his mother was left a wreck.
        It was so she settled my score.

    I said I must have my fling,
        And they knew the path I would go;
    Yet no one told me a thing
        Of what I needed to know.
    Folks talk too much of a soul
        From heavenly joys debarred -
    And not enough of the babes unborn,
        By the sins of their fathers scarred.



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