WILL WOOD’S PETITION TO THE PEOPLE OF IRELAND

BEING AN EXCELLENT NEW SONG, SUPPOSED TO BE MADE, AND SUNG IN THE STREETS OF DUBLIN, BY WILLIAM WOOD, IRONMONGER AND HALFPENNY-MONGER. 1725

   My dear Irish folks,
    Come leave off your jokes,
And buy up my halfpence so fine;
    So fair and so bright
    They’ll give you delight;
Observe how they glisten and shine!

   They’ll sell to my grief
    As cheap as neck-beef,
For counters at cards to your wife;
    And every day
    Your children may play
Span-farthing or toss on the knife.

   Come hither and try,
    I’ll teach you to buy
A pot of good ale for a farthing;
    Come, threepence a score,
    I ask you no more,
And a fig for the Drapier and Harding.

   When tradesmen have gold,
    The thief will be bold,
By day and by night for to rob him:
    My copper is such,
    No robber will touch,
And so you may daintily bob him.

   The little blackguard
    Who gets very hard
His halfpence for cleaning your shoes:
    When his pockets are cramm’d
    With mine, and be d — d,
He may swear he has nothing to lose.

   Here’s halfpence in plenty,
    For one you’ll have twenty,
Though thousands are not worth a pudden.
    Your neighbours will think,
    When your pocket cries chink.
You are grown plaguy rich on a sudden.

   You will be my thankers,
    I’ll make you my bankers,
As good as Ben Burton or Fade;
    For nothing shall pass
    But my pretty brass,
And then you’ll be all of a trade.

   I’m a son of a whore
    If I have a word more
To say in this wretched condition.
    If my coin will not pass,
    I must die like an ass;
And so I conclude my petition.

 

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