“THE TRUTH.”

By Francis William Lauderdale Adams

Come then, let us at least know what's the truth.

Let us not blink our eyes and say

We did not understand; old age or youth

Benumbed our sense or stole our sight away.

It is a lie — just that, a lie — to declare

That wages are the worth of work.

No; they are what the Employer wills to spare

To let the Employee sheer starvation shirk.

They're the life-pittance Competition leaves,

The least for which brother'll slay brother.

He who the fruits of this hell-strife receives,

He is a thief, an assassin, and none other!

It is a lie — just that, a lie — to declare

That Rent's the interest on just gains.

Rent's the thumb-screw that makes the worker share

With him who worked not the produce of his pains.

Rent's the wise tax the human tape-worm knows.

The fat he takes; the life-lean leaves.

The holy Landlord is, as we suppose,

Just this — the model of assassin-thieves!

What is the trick the rich-man, then, contrives?

How play my lords their brilliant roles?—

They live on the plunder of our toiling lives,

The degradation of our bodies and souls!