Analysis of Origin Of The Liquor Dealer

Ella Wheeler Wilcox 1855 (Janesville) – 1919



The devil in hell gave a festival,
And he called his imps from their wine-
Called them up from the ruddy cup,
And marshalled them into line.
And each to his place sprang the imps apace,
And they stood there, side by side.
'Now, listen well, O ye hosts of hell!
And mark me,' the devil cried.
'There is work to do for all of you,
Held for this night in store.
Then stir up the fire, till it burneth higher
Than ever it burned before.
When the coals glow hot, set ye the pot
Half full of the best brimstone.
And three of the worst and the most accursed
Hell claimeth as its own
Of demons bring, when the pot shall sing,
And cast them into the boil.'
Then over the region scattered the legion
Away to the fiendish toil.

They work with a will, and they work until
Three imps are aboil in the pot;
And the devil stands, and stirs with his hands
The liquid, seething hot;
And the demons revel around the devil
With many a fiendish shout,
Till he cries 'Ho, ho!' and the demons go
And turn the liquid out.

Turn it in, to a lake of gin,
Where the devil bathes, to cool.
Then lift it up, and turn on a cup
Of wine they dip from a pool.
Then they dip it in ale, till it turneth pale,
In beer, till it gloweth red.
It? nay, HE! for the thing they see
Is a man, from heel to head.

And he clasps the hands of the devil who stands
Bowing before his face.
And he says, 'Dear friend, will you please to send
A lad to show me my place?'

And the devil winks sly: and he says, 'Ay, ay!'
Old fellow, I guess you'll do.
You can work more wrong with that oily tongue
Than all my malicious crew.

'You must go to the earth! In th' halls of mirth,
In the teeming city's heart-
In any place that you show your face
I will help you do your part.

I will give you a name-it is steeped in shame,
But the world will use you well.
It is 'Liquor Dealer.' It means
soul stealer

And Major-General of Hell.
Go forth, my friend, and work to the end,
I will pay you in gleaming gold;
For every soul you drown in the bowl,
I will give you wealth untold.'

Then forth he went, this fiend hell-sent,
And he doeth his work to-day-
Doeth it well; and the hosts of hell
Are singing his praise alway.


Scheme ABCBDEFEGHIHJKEKXLXL XJMJANXN XOCOXPXP MDQD RGXG XSDS XFXI FQTXT XRFX
Poetic Form
Metre 0100110100 01111111 11110101 0101011 0111110101 0111111 110111111 0110101 111111111 111101 11101011110 1101101 101111101 1110110 011010011 11111 110110111 0110101 11001010010 0110101 1110101101 1111001 0010101111 010101 00101001010 1100101 1111100101 010101 11010111 1010111 111101101 1111101 1111011111 011111 11110111 1011111 01101101011 100111 0111111111 0111111 00101101111 1101111 1111111101 1110101 111101011111 0010101 010111111 1111111 11110111101 1011111 11101011 110 01010011 111101101 11110101 1100111001 1111101 11111111 0111111 11100111 110111
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 2,103
Words 443
Sentences 30
Stanzas 9
Stanza Lengths 20, 8, 8, 4, 4, 4, 4, 5, 4
Lines Amount 61
Letters per line (avg) 27
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 180
Words per stanza (avg) 48
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:11 min read
93

Ella Wheeler Wilcox

Ella Wheeler Wilcox was an American author and poet. more…

All Ella Wheeler Wilcox poems | Ella Wheeler Wilcox Books

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