When thou hast emptied thy soft purse, Take not from men more merchandise: Full well I know they'd trust thy looks, And enter no accounts in books Of goods bought by thy lovely eyes. Take not advantage of that hand, That men, admiring it too much, Forget the value of their stuff, And think that empty hand enough -- To make poor bankrupt men of such. Let not that voice of thine, like silk Translated into sound, commend Plain cloth to Jews, lest they should raise The price of it to match thy praise, And the poor suffer in the end. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...AN EXPATIATION ON THE COMBINING OF WEATHERS AT THIRTY .... by HAYDEN CARRUTH TO THE THAWING WIND by ROBERT FROST THE MYSTIC TRUMPETER by WALT WHITMAN COMPLAINS, BEING HIND'RED THE SIGHT OF HIS NYMPH by PHILIP AYRES AFFINITIES by CHARLES BAUDELAIRE THE CITY by HARRY RANDOLPH BLYTHE |