Saw’st thou ever Siquis patcht on Pauls Church door
To seek some vacant vicarage before?
Who wants a churchman that can service say,
Read fast and fair his monthly homily?
And wed and bury and make Christen-souls?
Come to the left-side alley of St. Paules.
Thou servile fool, why could’st thou not repair
To buy a benefice at Steeple-Fair?
There moughtest thou, for but a slendid price,
Advowson thee with some fat benefice:
Or if thee list not wait for dead mens shoon,
Nor pray each morn the incumbents days were doone:
A thousand patrons thither ready bring,
Their new-fall’n churches, to the chaffering;
Stake three years stipend: no man asketh more.
Go, take possession of the Church porch door,
And ring thy bells; luck stroken in thy fist
The parsonage is thine, or ere thou wist.
Saint Fool’s of Gotam mought thy parish be
For this thy base and servile Simony.
(Joseph Hall)
More Poetry from Joseph Hall:
Joseph Hall Poems based on Topics: Fate & Destiny, Fairness, Christianity, Fool- The Kings Prophecie (Joseph Hall Poems)
- Virgidemariu (Joseph Hall Poems)
- The Impecunious Fop (Joseph Hall Poems)
- Virgidemarium (excerpt) (Joseph Hall Poems)
- The Domestic Tudor's Position (Joseph Hall Poems)
Readers Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: Fairness Poems, Christianity Poems, Fate & Destiny Poems, Fool PoemsBased on Keywords: asketh, churchman, homily, parsonage, doone, benefice, stipend, pauls, vicarage, chaffering, simony
- Alma; or, The Progress of the Mind. In Three Cantos. - Canto I. (Matthew Prior Poems)
- The Merchant of Venice,: A Legend of Italy (Richard Harris Barham Poems)
- Convict Once - Part Second. (James Brunton Stephens Poems)
- Astraea: The Balance Of Illusions (Oliver Wendell Holmes Poems)
- Christ's Triumph after Death : Canto IV. Christ's Victory and Triumph (Giles Fletcher Jr Poems)