XXIV.
The Pamphleteers have plunder’d many Pockets, not overcharg’d with Money.
Two–penny Works (when Hawkers cry ’em)
What Man on Earth can chuse but buy ’em?
Therefore Expences to prevent,
I have at last resolv’d to print:
Buy this one Tract, and read it o’er,
And you will ne’re want any more.
Here C—r’s Doctrine is confuted,
Whate’er was, or shall be disputed,
From Adam down to us, and so
As far as Time himself can go.
(Nicholas Amhurst)
More Poetry from Nicholas Amhurst:
Nicholas Amhurst Poems based on Topics: Money & Wealth- The British General (Nicholas Amhurst Poems)
- Protestant Popery: Or, The Convocation - Canto III (Nicholas Amhurst Poems)
- A Congratulatory Epistle From His Holiness The Pope To The Reverend Dr. Snape (Nicholas Amhurst Poems)
- An Epistle From A Student At Oxford To The Chevalier (Nicholas Amhurst Poems)
- Protestant Popery: Or, The Convocation - Canto IV (Nicholas Amhurst Poems)
- The Protestant Session (Nicholas Amhurst Poems)
Readers Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: Money & Wealth PoemsBased on Keywords: hawkers, expences, confuted, pamphleteers, overcharg
- The Tragedy of White Injustice (Marcus Mosiah Garvey Poems)
- The Progres Of The Soule (John Donne Poems)
- Resignation Pt 1 (Edward Young Poems)
- The Minstrel; Or, The Progress Of Genius : Book I. (James Beattie Poems)
- A Poem On The African Slave Trade. Addressed To Her Own Sex. Part II (Mary Birkett Card Poems)