| The Works in Verse and Prose of Nicholas Breton | |
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A prety Epigram, vpon Welth and Will.
Where Welth doth want, there Will can bear no sway;
And where Will wants, there Wealth can make no way.
In many things, Welth greatly rules the roste,
In some things too, selfe will, will beare a sway.
To winne the wager, Welth will spare no cost,
Which, to subuert, Will worketh many a way:
And, in the end, let Welth doo what he can,
Yet, commonly, Will stands the stouter man.
| The Works in Verse and Prose of Nicholas Breton | |
|