Public Domain Poetry And Stories - An Excellent New Song, Upon The Declarations Of The Several Corporations Of The City Of Dublin by Jonathan Swift
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An Excellent New Song, Upon The Declarations Of The Several Corporations Of The City Of Dublin

    By Jonathan Swift




   
    AGAINST WOOD'S HALFPENCE

    To the tune of "London is a fine town," & c.


    O Dublin is a fine town
        And a gallant city,
    For Wood's trash is tumbled down,
        Come listen to my ditty,
            O Dublin is a fine town, & c.

    In full assembly all did meet
        Of every corporation,
    From every lane and every street,
        To save the sinking nation.
            O Dublin, & c.

    The bankers would not let it pass
        For to be Wood's tellers,
    Instead of gold to count his brass,
        And fill their small-beer cellars.
            O Dublin, & c.

    And next to them, to take his coin
        The Gild would not submit,
    They all did go, and all did join,
        And so their names they writ.
            O Dublin, & c.

    The brewers met within their hall,
        And spoke in lofty strains,
    These halfpence shall not pass at all,
        They want so many grains.
            O Dublin, & c.

    The tailors came upon this pinch,
        And wish'd the dog in hell,
    Should we give this same Wood an inch,
        We know he'd take an ell.
            O Dublin, & c.

    But now the noble clothiers
        Of honour and renown,
    If they take Wood's halfpence
        They will be all cast down.
            O Dublin, & c.

    The shoemakers came on the next,
        And said they would much rather,
    Than be by Wood's copper vext,
        Take money stampt on leather.
            O Dublin, & c.

    The chandlers next in order came,
        And what they said was right,
    They hoped the rogue that laid the scheme
        Would soon be brought to light.
            O Dublin, & c.

    And that if Wood were now withstood,
        To his eternal scandal,
    That twenty of these halfpence should
        Not buy a farthing candle.
            O Dublin, & c.

    The butchers then, those men so brave,
        Spoke thus, and with a frown;
    Should Wood, that cunning scoundrel knave,
        Come here, we'd knock him down.
            O Dublin, & c.

    For any rogue that comes to truck
        And trick away our trade,
    Deserves not only to be stuck,
        But also to be flay'd.
            O Dublin, & c.

    The bakers in a ferment were,
        And wisely shook their head;
    Should these brass tokens once come here
        We'd all have lost our bread.
            O Dublin, & c.

    It set the very tinkers mad,
        The baseness of the metal,
    Because, they said, it was so bad
        It would not mend a kettle.
            O Dublin, & c.

    The carpenters and joiners stood
        Confounded in a maze,
    They seem'd to be all in a wood,
        And so they went their ways.
            O Dublin, & c.

    This coin how well could we employ it
        In raising of a statue,
    To those brave men that would destroy it,
        And then, old Wood, have at you.
            O Dublin, & c.

    God prosper long our tradesmen then,
        And so he will I hope,
    May they be still such honest men,
        When Wood has got a rope.
            O Dublin is a fine town, & c.



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