Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A New Song On Wood's Halfpence by Jonathan Swift
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A New Song On Wood's Halfpence

    By Jonathan Swift



    Ye people of Ireland, both country and city,
    Come listen with patience, and hear out my ditty:
    At this time I'll choose to be wiser than witty.
                Which nobody can deny.

    The halfpence are coming, the nation's undoing,
    There's an end of your ploughing, and baking, and brewing;
    In short, you must all go to wreck and to ruin.
                Which, & c.

    Both high men and low men, and thick men and tall men,
    And rich men and poor men, and free men and thrall men,
    Will suffer; and this man, and that man, and all men.
                Which, & c.

    The soldier is ruin'd, poor man! by his pay;
    His fivepence will prove but a farthing a-day,
    For meat, or for drink; or he must run away.
                Which, & c.

    When he pulls out his twopence, the tapster says not,
    That ten times as much he must pay for his shot;
    And thus the poor soldier must soon go to pot.
                Which, & c.

    If he goes to the baker, the baker will huff,
    And twentypence have for a twopenny loaf,
    Then dog, rogue, and rascal, and so kick and cuff.
                Which, & c.

    Again, to the market whenever he goes,
    The butcher and soldier must be mortal foes,
    One cuts off an ear, and the other a nose.
                Which, & c.

    The butcher is stout, and he values no swagger;
    A cleaver's a match any time for a dagger,
    And a blue sleeve may give such a cuff as may stagger.
                Which, & c.

    The beggars themselves will be broke in a trice,
    When thus their poor farthings are sunk in their price;
    When nothing is left they must live on their lice.
                Which, & c.

    The squire who has got him twelve thousand a-year,
    O Lord! what a mountain his rents would appear!
    Should he take them, he would not have house-room, I fear.
                Which, & c.

    Though at present he lives in a very large house,
    There would then not be room in it left for a mouse;
    But the squire is too wise, he will not take a souse.
                Which, & c.

    The farmer who comes with his rent in this cash,
    For taking these counters and being so rash,
    Will be kick'd out of doors, both himself and his trash.
                Which, & c.

    For, in all the leases that ever we hold,
    We must pay our rent in good silver and gold,
    And not in brass tokens of such a base mould.
                Which, & c.

    The wisest of lawyers all swear, they will warrant
    No money but silver and gold can be current;
    And, since they will swear it, we all may be sure on't.
                Which, & c.

    And I think, after all, it would be very strange,
    To give current money for base in exchange,
    Like a fine lady swapping her moles for the mange.
                Which, & c.

    But read the king's patent, and there you will find,
    That no man need take them, but who has a mind,
    For which we must say that his Majesty's kind.
                Which, & c.

    Now God bless the Drapier who open'd our eyes!
    I'm sure, by his book, that the writer is wise:
    He shows us the cheat, from the end to the rise.
                Which, & c.

    Nay, farther, he shows it a very hard case,
    That this fellow Wood, of a very bad race,
    Should of all the fine gentry of Ireland take place.
                Which, & c.

    That he and his halfpence should come to weigh down
    Our subjects so loyal and true to the crown:
    But I hope, after all, that they will be his own.
                Which, & c.

    This book, I do tell you, is writ for your goods,
    And a very good book 'tis against Mr. Wood's,
    If you stand true together, he's left in the suds.
                Which, & c.

    Ye shopmen, and tradesmen, and farmers, go read it,
    For I think in my soul at this time that you need it;
    Or, egad, if you don't, there's an end of your credit.
                Which nobody can deny.



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