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The Hell-Bound Train,
Author Unknown
A Texas cowboy lay down on a barroom
floor, having drunk so much he could drink no more
So he fell asleep with a troubled brain, to dream that he rode on a
hell-bound train.
The engine with murderous blood was damp, and was brilliantly lit with a
brimstone lamp;
An imp, for fuel, was shoveling bones, while the furnace rang with a
thousand groans.
The boiler was filled with lager beer, and the devil himself was the
engineer;
The passengers were a most motley crew -- Church member, atheist,
Gentile and Jew,
Rich men in broadcloth, beggars in rags, handsome young ladies, and
withered old hags,
Yellow and black men, red, brown and white, all chained together -- Oh
God, what a sight!
While the train rushed on at an awful pace -- the sulfurous fumes
scorched their hands and face;
Wider and wider the country grew, as faster and faster the engine flew.
Louder and louder the thunder crashed and brighter and brighter the
lightning flashed;
Hotter and hotter the air became, till the clothes were burned from each
quivering flame.
And out of the distance there arose a yell, "Ha, ha," said the devil,
"we're nearing hell!"
Then oh, how the passengers all shrieked with pain, and begged the devil
to stop the train.
But he capered about and danced for glee, and laughed and joked at their
misery.
"My faithful friends, you have done the work, and the devil never can a
payday shirk."
"You've bullied the weak, you've robbed the poor, the starving brother
you've turned from the
door; You've laid up gold where canker rusts, and have given free vent
to your beastly lusts."
"You've justice scorned, and corruption sown, and trampled the laws of
nature down.
You have drunk, rioted, cheated, plundered, and lied, and mocked at God
in your hell-born pride."
"You've paid full fare, so I'll carry you through, for it's only right
you should have your due.
Why, the laborer always expects his hire, so I'll land you safe in the
lake of fire,
Where your flesh will waste in the flames that roar, and my imps torment
you forevermore."
Then the cowboy awoke with an anguished cry, his clothes wet with sweat
and his hair standing high.
Then he prayed as he never had prayed till that hour to be saved from
his sin and the demon's
power; and his prayers and his vows were not in vain, for he never rode
the hell-bound train.
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