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The Run Upon The Bankers[1]

By Jonathan Swift

Topics: classic

The bold encroachers on the deep         Gain by degrees huge tracts of land,     Till Neptune, with one general sweep,         Turns all again to barren strand.     The multitude's capricious pranks         Are said to represent the seas,     Breaking the bankers and the banks,         Resume their own whene'er they please.     Money, the life-blood of the nation,         Corrupts and stagnates in the veins,     Unless a proper circulation         Its motion and its heat maintains.     Because 'tis lordly not to pay,         Quakers and aldermen in state,     Like peers, have levees every day         Of duns attending at their gate.     We want our money on the nail;         The banker's ruin'd if he pays:     They seem to act an ancient tale;         The birds are met to strip the jays.     "Riches," the wisest monarch sings,         "Make pinions for themselves to fly;"[2]     They fly like bats on parchment wings,         And geese their silver plumes supply.     No money left for squandering heirs!         Bills turn the lenders into debtors:     The wish of Nero[3] now is theirs,         "That they had never known their letters."     Conceive the works of midnight hags,         Tormenting fools behind their backs:     Thus bankers, o'er their bills and bags,         Sit squeezing images of wax.     Conceive the whole enchantment broke;         The witches left in open air,     With power no more than other folk,         Exposed with all their magic ware.     So powerful are a banker's bills,         Where creditors demand their due;     They break up counters, doors, and tills,         And leave the empty chests in view.     Thus when an earthquake lets in light         Upon the god of gold and hell,     Unable to endure the sight,         He hides within his darkest cell.     As when a conjurer takes a lease         From Satan for a term of years,     The tenant's in a dismal case,         Whene'er the bloody bond appears.     A baited banker thus desponds,         From his own hand foresees his fall,     They have his soul, who have his bonds;         'Tis like the writing on the wall.[4]     How will the caitiff wretch be scared,         When first he finds himself awake     At the last trumpet, unprepared,         And all his grand account to make!     For in that universal call,         Few bankers will to heaven be mounters;     They'll cry, "Ye shops, upon us fall!         Conceal and cover us, ye counters!"     When other hands the scales shall hold,         And they, in men's and angels' sight     Produced with all their bills and gold,         "Weigh'd in the balance and found light!"

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Author:Jonathan Swift

"The bold encroachers on the deep..." by Jonathan Swift

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Jonathan Swift

About Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift (1667–1745) was an Irish satirist, essayist, and poet. Best known for "Gulliver's Travels," his poetry includes "A Description of a City Shower" and "Verses on the Death of Dr. Swift." His sharp wit and moral indignation made him one of the greatest satirists in English.

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