Analysis of Virtues That Pay

Joseph Furphy 1843 (Yering, Victoria) – 1912 (Claremont)



You argue — as sympathy governs your bias —
That Wisdom distributes the capon and crust,
Indulging the sinful, and stinting the pious,
Or starving the wicked, and fattening the just.
You are wrong to the Evil One; hear what I say
There are ruinous virtues, and virtues that pay.

If your purpose be saving your soul and your bacon —
Fruition forthwith, and a sweet by-and-bye;
If your definite project stand clear and unshaken
A fatman on earth, and a seraph on high
In working this out let it still be your lay
There are ruinous virtues, and virtues that pay.

Such virtues are not of the workshop or cloister:
They test every act by the way it pans out;
They prompt you to seize on the world as your oyster,
Inserting our knife with a spirit devout.
For strait is the portal, and narrow the way
Representing the route of the virtues that pay.

Men as good as yourself, or most probably better,
Have gone to the rear, after many a try —
A permanent wage-slave, a usurers' debtor
Reduced to the motto of 'Root, hog or die,'
But their handicap dates from an earlier day,
When they failed in espousals of virtues that pay.

There is nothing outre in the man with the bluey;
He started, like you, for a goal undisclosed
But never in life can he come within coo-ee —
Though he may reach a goal, (with the vowels transposed)
And a similar Sheol gapes fair in your way,
If you turn out deficient in virtues that pay.

You must race, like St. Paul —you must race for the dollar —
No pause of compunction must ever intrude:
You must watch, you must pray, never missing a collar
The course is severe, and the company good.
You must reverence the Thrift-God, and earnestly pray
To be grounded and built up in virtues that pay.

By this means you will serve the Almighty and Mammon,
And die in a state of salvation and wealth;
When the clergy, without a suggestion of gammon,
Will furnish your soul with a clean bill of health.
So you'll sweep through the gates in your spotless array
A shining example of Virtues that pay.


Scheme ababcC dedecC fgfgcc fefecc hihicc fxfxcc djdjcc
Poetic Form
Metre 110110010110 1100100101 01001001010 110010010001 111101011111 111001001011 1110110110110 01011001101 1110010110010 011100111 01011111111 111001001011 11011101110 111001101111 111111011110 010101101001 11101001001 01001101011 1111011110010 11101101001 0100110110 01101011111 11101111001 1110111011 111010011010 1101110101 110011110111 111101101001 00100111011 111101001011 1111111111010 11101011001 1111111010010 01101001001 1110001101001 111001101011 111111001001 01001101001 1010010010110 11011101111 111101011001 01001011011
Closest metre Iambic hexameter
Characters 2,027
Words 376
Sentences 13
Stanzas 7
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6
Lines Amount 42
Letters per line (avg) 37
Words per line (avg) 9
Letters per stanza (avg) 224
Words per stanza (avg) 53
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on April 21, 2023

1:52 min read
72

Joseph Furphy

Joseph Furphy is widely regarded as the "Father of the Australian novel". He mostly wrote under the pseudonym Tom Collins and is best known for his novel Such Is Life (1903), regarded as an Australian classic. more…

All Joseph Furphy poems | Joseph Furphy Books

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