An Election Expense

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An Election Expense

Stanford, when recently you gave Tom Fitch

Ten thousand dollars, gold, to “stump the State”

(A circumstance of no importance, which

You deemed it right, however, to relate

To the grand jury) did you calculate

That it and other sums, which I will not

Embarrass you by naming, would come back,

As bread upon the waters, piping hot,

With added pancakes in an ample stack?

’Twere better, sir, to cast your bread-and-butter

(You’d get that back, at least) into the gutter.

Tom Fitch’s “silver tongue” is very well

If let alone⁠—though that he’ll never do.

For he must live by what he has to sell,

And silver should be “free,” that’s very true.

But how the devil could the thing help you?

Like an unruly child, it kicks and squalls

In mutiny whene’er he moves his chin,

And ne’er is faithful except when he falls

Asleep in Je⁠—I mean, of course, in Gin.

Tom’s tongue make Senators? No, no, that’s gammon;

They’re made by Mr. Stow and Mr. Mammon.

I know they are, for once I saw the two

Hobnobbing in a friendly kind of way

Up there at Sacramento. It is true

You were not with them. I heard statesmen say

You took good care to tarry at the Bay,

Where you could be “surprised” when Creed should claim

Your ear, and hope you’d pardon him, and sigh,

And say he’d ventured to propose your name,

And that all men had thrown their hats so high

That none had yet come down, and split their collars

With cheers, and⁠—would you loan him twenty dollars?

A famous person said that God and he

Were a majority; so, by your leave,

Are you and Mammon; but it seems to me

That you and he on this Thanksgiving eve

Should drink a stirrup-cup (for I perceive

You ride your philanthropic hobby⁠—Ned

Curtis astride behind you) and so part.

For, after all is done and all is said.

Mammon & Stanford are not over-smart.

The firm’s an old one, but not quite respected

Since you in statesmanship have been detected.