Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Cities Of The Plain by Edgar Lee Masters
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Cities Of The Plain

    By Edgar Lee Masters



    Where are the cabalists, the insidious committees,
    The panders who betray the idiot cities
    For miles and miles toward the prairie sprawled,
    Ignorant, soul-less, rich,
    Smothered in fumes of pitch?

            *        *        *        *        *

    Rooms of mahogany in tall sky scrapers
    See the unfolding and the folding up
    Of ring-clipped papers,
    And letters which keep drugged the public cup.
    The walls hear whispers and the semi-tones
    Of voices in the corner, over telephones
    Muffled by Persian padding, gemmed with brass spittoons.
    Butts of cigars are on the glass topped table,
    And through the smoke, gracing the furtive Babel,
    The bishop's picture blesses the picaroons,
    Who start or stop the life of millions moving
    Unconscious of obedience, the plastic
    Yielders to satanic and dynastic
    Hands of reproaching and approving.

            *        *        *        *        *

    Here come knights armed,
    But with their arms concealed,
    And rubber heeled.
    Here priests and wavering want are charmed.
    And shadows fall here like the shark's
    In messages received or sent.
    Signals are flying from the battlement.
    And every president
    Of rail, gas, coal and oil, the parks,
    The receipt of custom knows, without a look,
    Their meaning as the code is in no book.
    The treasonous cracksmen of the city's wealth
    Watch for the flags of stealth!

            *        *        *        *        *

    Acres of coal lie fenced along the tracks.
    Tracks ribbon the streets, and beneath the streets
    Wires for voices, fire, thwart the plebiscites,
    And choke the counsels and symposiacs
    Of dreamers who have pity for the backs
    That bear and bleed.
    All things are theirs: tracks, wires, streets and coal,
    The church's creed,
    The city's soul,
    The city's sea girt loveliness,
    The merciless and meretricious press.

            *        *        *        *        *

    Far up in a watch-tower, where the news is printed,
    Gray faces and bright eyes, weary and cynical
    Discuss fresh wonders of the old cabal.
    But nothing of its work in type is hinted:
    Taxes are high! The mentors of the town
    Must keep their taxes down
    On buildings, presses, stocks
    In gas, oil, coal and docks.
    The mahogany rooms conceal a spider man
    Who holds the taxing bodies through the church,
    And knights with arms concealed. The mentors search
    The spider man, the master publican,
    And for his friendship silence keep,
    Letting him herd the populace like sheep
    For self and for the insatiable desires
    Of coal and tracks and wires,
    Pick judges, legislators,
    And tax-gatherers.
    Or name his favorites, whom they name:
    The slick and sinistral,
    Servitors of the cabal,
    For praise which seems the equivalent of fame:
    Giving to the delicate handed crackers
    Of priceless safes, the spiritual slackers,
    The flash and thunder of front pages!
    And the gulled millions stare and fling their wages
    Where they are bidden, helpless and emasculate.
    And the unilluminate,
    Whose brows are brass,
    Who weep on every Sabbath day
    For Jesus riding on an ass,
    Scarce know the ass is they,
    Now ridden by his effigy,
    The publican with Jesus' painted mask,
    Along a way where fumes of odorless gas
    First spur then fell them from the task.

            *        *        *        *        *

    Through the parade runs swift the psychic cackle
    Like thorns beneath a boiling pot that crackle.
    And the angels say to Yahveh looking down
    From the alabaster railing, on the town,
    O, cackle, cackle, cackle, crack and crack
    We wish we had our little Sodom back!




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