Money is one of the most powerful forces in the world, both in terms of its ability to shape our lives and our relationships with each other.
It has been the subject of countless stories, poems, and songs, and has been the focus of intense debate for centuries.
While the topic of money can be complex and divisive, there is no denying its power. From Shakespeare’s famous words, “Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none.
Authors, poets, and philosophers have long been inspired by money and the impact it has on society and have some money poems out there.
To further explore the complexity of money, here are some of the poems about money that everyone should read.
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Best Poems about Money
This category covers some of the best money poems and its impact on our lives. Read on to explore the different perspectives on money.
1. No Man Without Money
by Robert Herrick
No man such rare parts hath, that he can swim,
If favor or occasion help not him.
2. Money
by Philip Larkin
In fact, they’ve a lot in common, if you enquire:
You can’t put off being young until you retire,
And however you bank your screw, the money you save
Won’t in the end buy you more than a shave.
3. Ten Pence Story
by Simon Armitage
Those with faith in the system say ‘don’t quit,
bide your time, if you’re worth it, you’ll make it.’
But I was robbed, I was badly tendered.
I could have scored. I could have contended.
4. Money
by Robert Frost
Nobody was ever meant
(…)
What he did with every cent.
5. Money
by Howard Simon
Money
Money
Money
Money
Important
Useful
Necessary
Money
Money
Money
Wealthy
Middle
Poverty
Money
Money
Money
Save
Give
Spend
Money
Money
Borrow
Lend
Money
Money
Foe
Friend
Money
Money
Master
Slave
Money
Money
Satisfied
Crave
Money
Money
Laugh
Cry
Money
Money
Live
Die
Money
Money
Sick
Well
Money
Money
Heaven
Hell
6. Selecting A Reader
by Ted Kooser
First, I would have her be beautiful,
and walking carefully up on my poetry
at the loneliest moment of an afternoon,
her hair still damp at the neck
from washing it. She should be wearing
a raincoat, an old one, dirty
from not having money enough for the cleaners.
She will take out her glasses, and there
in the bookstore, she will thumb
over my poems, then put the book back
up on its shelf. She will say to herself,
‘For that kind of money, I can get
my raincoat cleaned.’ And she will.
7. Bankers Are Just Like Anybody Else, Except Richer
by Ogden Nash
This is a song to celebrate banks,
Because they are full of money and you go into them and all
you hear is clinks and clanks,
Or maybe a sound like the wind in the trees on the hills,
Which is the rustling of the thousand dollar bills.
Most bankers dwell in marble halls,
Which they get to dwell in because they encourage deposits
and discourage withdrawals,
And particularly because they all observe one rule which woe
besides the banker who fails to heed it,
Which is you must never lend any money to anybody unless
they don’t need it.
I know you, you cautious conservative banks!
If people are worried about their rent it is your duty to deny
them the loan of one nickel, yes, even one copper engraving
of the martyred son of the late Nancy Hanks;
Yes, if they request fifty dollars to pay for a baby you must
look at them like Tarzan looking at an uppity ape in the
jungle,
And tell them what do they think a bank is, anyhow, they had
better go get the money from their wife’s aunt or ungle.
But suppose people come in and they have a million and they
want another million to pile on top of it,
Why, you brim with the milk of human kindness and you
urge them to accept every drop of it,
And you lend them the million so then they have two million
and this gives them the idea that they would be better off
with four,
So they already have two million as security so you have no
hesitation in lending them two more,
And all the vice-presidents nod their heads in rhythm,
And the only question asked is do the borrowers want the
money sent or do they want to take it withm.
Because I think they deserve our appreciation and thanks,
the jackasses who go around saying that health and happi-
ness are everything and money isn’t essential,
Because as soon as they have to borrow some unimportant
money to maintain their health and happiness they starve
to death so they can’t go around any more sneering at good
old money, which is nothing short of providential.
8. A Coin
by Carl Sandburg
Your western heads here cast on money,
You are the two that fade away together,
Partners in the mist.
Lunging buffalo shoulder,
Lean Indian face,
We who come after where you are gone
Salute your forms on the new nickel.
You are
To us:
The past.
Runners
On the prairie:
Good-by.
9. Hope Your Happy
by Jessica Anonymous
I hope your happy with your life
I hope your happy with your wife
I hope you see what you have done
I hope you see that this is all wrong
I hope you realize that you’re not perfect
I hope you see that money’s not worth it
I hope you realize that family comes first
I hope you see that my smile was rehearsed
I hope you see that your tearing me apart
I hope you someday grow a heart
I hope someday I will want to see you
I hope someday I won’t have to see you
I hope you suffer, but I don’t want that
I hope you die, but I don’t mean that
I hope someday your ‘love’ will be real
I hope someday you will ‘feel’
I hope you realize that money can’t heal
I hope someday you’ll feel, what I feel
I hope that before you die
I hope to tell you, I won’t cry
I hoped you would be a good dad
I hoped you wouldn’t make me mad
But all my hopes from before are gone
just like the love you had for their mom
I hope that I see you one last time
I hope I get to tell you this:
‘I wish I never knew you
Because of you I wish I didn’t exist….’
10. Fool’s Money Bags
by Amy Lowell
The Beloved is writing a letter.
Occasionally she speaks to the dog,
But she is thinking of her writing.
Does she, too, give her devotion to one
Not worthy?
Funny Poems about Money
This collection of funny money poems celebrates the often-complicated relationship we have with money. Enjoy a lighthearted look at the subject!
1. Where There’s A Will There’s A Relative
by Cheryl Hoffman
They crawl out of the woodwork
Shedding lots of crocodile tears
Grieving for an ancient relative
They’ve not visited for many years
‘Auntie Annie’ is barely warm
But now you see the relations swarm
Waiting for the will to be read
They rub their hands with glee
Hoping they will be left
Lots of lovely money
‘Grieving relatives’ is rubbish!! Some are taking the mick ….
These mercenary vultures simply make me sick!
2. She Means the World to Me
by Freddie Robinson Jr.
I gotta crooked legged woman
With legs that go where they choose
Her lips are shaped like a beer mug
And over flowin with booze
She means the world to me
And a freak that makes me money
Her face is like a chocolate chip cookie
Covered in spots dots and all of that
I don’t need a road map to find my way around
Just look at her face and I know where I’m at
She means the world to me
And a freak that makes me money
She gotta hunch back
From her boobs that sag
They look like two egg yolks
On two kwik mart bags
But She means the world to me
And a freak that makes me money.
3. Atm Terminator
by Marycile Beer
Sarah Shopper!
Coupon please budget-y listen
and bankruptcy understand
That ATM Terminator is out there —
It can’t be mall bargained with,
nor consumer reasoned with
An Automated Teller Machine
doesn’t feel purse pity,
or cancelled check remorse
Or insolvency fear
And it absolutely
will not cash register stop,
checkout ever!
Until you are empty pocket dead
Poem Details | by L Milton Hanlins |
Categories: humor, money,
Stash
An old crone who was living in Moffett
Sold all her household wares for a profit
She was simply bold,
[At least I am told],To stash all the money in her soffit.
4. Money Down the Drain
by James Fraser
The wind in my hair does rearrange
What $25
Took thirty minutes to train
5. Cile Beer
by Joseph Coogan
I know of a pretty New Jersey lass
Who decided to vacation First Class
But on the very first night
Oh no! Cancelled flight
What a total pain in the ***
I’m sure her tomorrows will be better
Or she’ll surely be posting a letter
If her plane don’t take off soon
It could be worse than High Noon
She’ll be angry, we’ll just have to fetter
When things couldn’t have gotten any worse
Once again she has to dip into her purse
For the flight is okay
But triple charges she’ll pay
A vacation just shouldn’t be a curse.
6. An Ode to Clam Chowder
by Cona Adams
Oh, clam chowder, how I would love
You to be like the thing you claim you taste of.
You’re seafood, soup, potatoes, all warm
And bubbling in a splendrous, thick liquid form.
Your amount of potatoes, though is extensive,
Because I guess that clam is just too expensive
To be present in amounts that meet my desires.
But I suppose you’d be too costly for buyers.
But aside from that, clam chowder, you’re alright.
I’ll probably still have some tonight.
Poem Details | by Cecilia Macfarlane |
Categories: funny, money, stress,
Charge It
I only just begun to charge
Impulsive buys are way too large
My credit card sighs
While bankbook cries
My pay cheque I need to enlarge
7. A Fool And His Money Are Soon Parted
by Brian Strand
I slipped on a fry and hurt my back
Sue Burger King! said my lawyer Jack
I asked for big bucks
But Jack kinda sucks
Now I carry my stuff in a sack
8. Running Costs
by Jan Allison
“I ran behind a bus”, said Ben,
“Saved a good five dollars again”.
“Oh fool!” dad exclaimed,
“My son, I’m ashamed.
Chasing cabs, you could’ve saved ten!”
9. Where To
by Sara Kendrick
My payday’s a monthly event
But … ‘fore it’s here – it’s been spent
… Search ever’ where
… Wondering’ where
All that money has … went?
10. Money Not Love
by Martin Kloess
Went to Wal-Mart to buy a Christmas ham
All I could find was a giant traffic jam
Near the toys decorations
By my calculations
Come day after Christmas, dumpsters see cram.
11. My Pole Dancer
by Sam Ruby
This Pole Dancer she was with me
all other men must pay her fee
Still I must confess
my family’s stress
But Polish dance lessons aren’t free
12. I
by Jerry T Curtis
If its money I got its money ill keep.
If its money I have its money ill weep.
If its love that I give its love ill receive.
For I am but no one who just see’s beneath.
13. Going to Market
by Jeralynn Clark
I’m joining up with Trade King
Cause I’m sick of being poor
I’m sure I’ll make a fortune with some luck
Then I won’t have to worry
When that doe comes rolling in
And have more, than these two lousy bucks
Of course I’ll need some cash
If I’m going to invest
So, it might take some time, to get rich
So, for now I’ll take my two bucks
And bet it on a nag
Or down at the dog track, on a *****
14. Money
by Paula Goldsmith
Money
can’t buy happiness
can’t cash in on love either
Buy an umbrella.
Famous Poems about Money
Money has long been a topic of fascination in literature, with poets exploring its power and influence in their works. The famous money poems capture the wide range of emotions and experiences associated with money.
1. The Real Riches
by John G. Saxe
Every coin of earthly treasure
We have lavished upon earth
For our simple worldly pleasure
May be reckoned something worth;
For the spending was not losing,
Tho’ the purchase were but small;
It has perished with the using.
We have had it,—that is all!
All the gold we leave behind us,
When we turn to dust again,
Tho’ our avarice may blind us,
We have gathered quite in vain;
Since we neither can direct it,
By the winds of fortune tost,
Nor in other worlds expect it;
What we hoarded we have lost.
But each merciful oblation—
Seed of pity wisely sown,
What we gave in self-negation,
We may safely call our own;
For the treasure freely given
Is the treasure that we hoard,
Since the angels keep in heaven,
What is lent unto the Lord.
2. How They Conjugate “To Have”
by Anonymous
I met a man of aspect wise
Engaged in catching butterflies.
“A gorgeous box-full friend,” quoth I.
“Now for what purpose sage and high
Didst catch this lovely company?”
“That I might have them,” answered he.
I saw a man with eager eyes
In bookstores hunting for a prize
Hid in the dim and dusty nooks,–
Some rare, forgotten, worthless books.
“What is their use, my friend, to thee?”
“That I may have them,” answered he.
I met a weary, haggard elf
Absorbed in reckoning up his pelf;
As, so much gain, and so much cost,
And so much, so much, so much lost.
“What joy from all your golden tide?”
“That I may have it,” he replied.
I met a man of busy hands,
With wealth of books and friends and lands,
Yet ever seeking some new task
Or helpful service. “Friend,” I ask,
“Why do you toil so ceaselessly?”
“That men may have me,” answers he.
3. Success
by Amos Russel Wells
If he succeeds whose coffers, heaped with gold,
Are red with ruined and despairing lives,
The man who owns a mint to coin tears,
Expert to wring a farthing from a heart,—
Though all the world pay homage, all the world
Envy the wretch,—if this is to succeed,
My pride and all my hope shall be to fail!
If he succeeds who bids the magpie crowd,
Tossing his name upon its chattering tongues,
Talk, write, and dream of him, and they obey,
While he they praise, alive on lips of men,
Has breathed his soul into the bubble, fame,
And lives an empty life,—if he succeeds,
Be mine a life of failure to the end!
If he succeeds, the man of strenuous brain,
Skilled in the deeps and heights of many a lore,
Bent with the plundered wealth of libraries,
But ignorant of love, and ignorant
Of all the roses and the stars of life,—
Though men unite to wonder and applaud,
If this is called success, be mine defeat!
But these are not success; success it is
To front the angry tumult of a world
With Right for comrade; faithfully to work;
To wear contentment shining on the brow;
Above the gathered treasures of the globe
To reckon brotherhood and make it mine,
This is success, and this my prayer shall be.
4. Health and Wealth
by Anonymous
We squander health in search of wealth;
We scheme and toil and save;
Then squander wealth in search of health,
But only find a grave.
We live, and boast of what we own;
We die, and only get a stone.
5. One Hundred Per Cent
by Amos Russel Wells
“I should like to be rich,” said young Tom, with a sigh;
“There are so many things I am aching to buy!
Oh, would I had money, and would it were lent,
To good steady payers, at fifteen per cent!”
Now it chanced a wise man, just in passing, had heard
Tom’s sighs and repining, each covetous word;
So he took the young fellow astride of his knee,
And taught him to grow just as rich as could be.
And this way ’twas done. Every once in a while
Tom would lend to some neighbor—a sunshiny smile;
And every time, for the smile he had lent,
Tom got two in return. That’s one hundred per cent!
Bright greetings, warm kisses, kind deeds on the sly,
All bring him an interest equally high;
And before many days I am bold to declare,
You will find that young Tom is a true millionaire.
6. Better than Gold
by Father Ryan
Better than grandeur, better than gold,
Than rank and title, a thousand fold,
Is a healthy body, a mind at ease,
And simple pleasures that always please;
A heart that can feel for another’s woe,
And share his joys with genial glow,
With sympathies large enough to enfold
All men as brothers, is better than gold.
Better than gold is a conscience clear,
Though toiling for bread in a humble sphere;
Doubly blessed with content and health,
Untried by the lust or cares of wealth;
Lowly living and lofty thought
Adorn and ennoble a poor man’s cot;
For mind and morals in nature’s plan,
Are the genuine tests of a gentleman.
Better than gold is the sweet repose,
Of the sons of toil when their labors close;
Better than gold is the poor man’s sleep
And the balm that drops on his slumber deep.
Bring sleepy draughts to the downy bed,
Where luxury pillows its aching head,
But he his simple opiate deems,
A shorter route to the land of dreams.
Better than gold is the thinking mind,
That in the realm of books can find
A treasure surpassing Australian ore,
And live with the great and good of yore—
The sage’s lore and poet’s lay,
The glories of empires passed away;
The world’s great dream will thus enfold,
And yield a pleasure better than gold.
Better than gold is a peaceful home,
Where all the fire-side charities come—
The shrine of love, the heaven of life,
Hallowed by mother, or sister, or wife.
However humble the home may be,
Or tried with sorrow by Heaven’s decree,
The blessings that never were bought or sold,
And center there, are better than gold.
7. Love’s Millionaire
by Florence May Alt
Within my little cottage
Are peace and warmth and light;
And loving welcome waiting
When I come home at night.
The polished kettle’s steaming,
The snowy cloth is spread—
And close against my shoulder
There leans a smooth brown head!
Her eyes are lit with laughter
(They light the world for me)—
“For how much would you sell me?
Now tell me, sir!” cries she.
‘Tis then I answer, somehow,
Between a smile and tear,
“Not for all the gold in Klondike!
The gold in Klondike, dear!”
When the cosy tea is over,
With many a frolic fond,
I sit and read my paper;
And from the room beyond
I hear the clink china,
The tread of nimble feet,
And broken bits of singing
That somehow ripple sweet.
I hear a rush and rustle
Behind my easy-chair;
Short, chubby arms enclasp me
And choke me unaware!
Into my arms is tumbled
A crinkled, golden head,
A ball of fluffy whiteness
That ought to be in bed.
She asks her mother’s question—
I kiss the answer clear;
“Not for all the gold Klondike;
The gold in Klondike, dear!”
In dim and dusky office
I dig my bits of gold;
I suffer not with hunger,
Nor perish with the cold.
My nuggets needs by tiny
(I dig them with a pen),
But the Yukon’s golden gravel
I leave for other men.
My treasure lies exhaustless,
My claim is staked with care;
What is all the gold in Klondike,
Since I’m love’s millionaire?
8. True Nobility
by Robert Nicoll
I ask not for his lineage,
I ask not for his name;
If manliness be in his heart,
He noble birth may claim.
I care not though of this world’s wealth
But slender be his part,
If yes, you answer, when I ask
Hath he a true man’s heart?
I ask not from what land he came,
Nor where his youth was nursed;
If pure the stream, it matters not
The spot from whence it burst.
The palace or the hovel,
Where first his life began,
I seek not for; but answer this,
Is he an honest man?
9. The Gift
by Bliss Carman
I said to Life, “How comes it,
With all this wealth in store,
Of beauty, joy, and knowledge,
Thy cry is still for more?
“Count all the years of striving
To make thy burden less,—
The things designed and fashioned
To gladden thy success!
“The treasures sought and gathered
Thy lightest whim to please,—
The loot of all the ages,
The spoil of all the seas!
“Is there no end of labor,
No limit to thy need?
Must man go bowed forever
In bondage to thy greed?”
With tears of pride and passion
she answered, “God above!
I only wait the asking,
To spend it all for love!”
10. Warning From the Gold Mine
by Hannah Flagg Gould
Ye who rend my bed of earth,
Mark me! From my lowly birth,
Ye to light in me will bring
What will rise to be your king!
I shall rule with tyrant sway,
Till ye rue my natal day!
High and low my power shall own,
For I’ll make the world my throne!
And my worshippers shall be
Martyrs, dupes, or slaves to me.
Love and friendship, on the way
to their idol, they will slay.
Conscience—I will still her cry;
Truth for me shall bleed and die!
I will prove a chain to bind
Down to earth the immortal mind!
Though ye try me by the fire,
This will only heat my ire.
Though my form ye oft may change,
‘T will but give me wider range!
For my sake the poor shall feel
on his face, his neighbor’s heel.
Then I’ll turn, and, taking wing,
Leave with avarice but a sting!
I will be a spur to crime,
Ye shall sell your peace through time;
And a long eternity
Of remorse shall come, for me!
Now I’m here without defense;
But, if once I’m taken hence,
Man shall eat the bitter fruit
Springing from a golden root!
11. Simplicity Vs. Materialism Things! Things! Things!
by Amos Russel Wells
Things! Things! Things!
On the tables, on the floor,
Tucked away behind the door,
On the shelves and on the chairs,
Dangerously on the stairs,
Bureaus crammed and closets filled,
Boxes packed and boxes spilled,
Bundles everywhere you go,
Heaps and piles and overflow
Of things, things, things!
Things! Things! Things!
Things of value, worthless trash,
Things preserved or gone to smash,
Ancient things or things just bought,
Common things and things far-sought,
Things you mean to throw away,
Things you hope to use some day,
Cellar, attic, all between,
One exasperating scene
Of things, things, things!
Things! Things! Things!
Things that take our precious time,
Hold us from the life sublime,
Things that only gather dust,
Things that rot and things that rust,
Things that mould and things that freese,
Things that harbor foul disease,
Things that mock us and defy,
Till at last we grimly die
Of things, things, things!
Things! Things! Things!
Let me cease to be their fool!
Let me fly their crafty rule!
Let me with unsparing knife
Cut their canker from my life!
Broad and clear and all serene
Let me make my mansion clean,
Now und evermore to be
Calm, unfrctted, grandly free
From things, things, things!
12. The Nest
by Anonymous
The nest is round and the nest is small,
Dear little circle enclosing all,
All of the joy in the wide world’s bound,
Though the nest is small and the nest round.
The nest is fashioned of common things,
Leaves and grasses and twigs and strings,
Yet never a palace so lordly fine
As the palace fashioned of leaves and twine.
The house had never an architect,
No pother of plans to discuss and select,
But Love was the builder and Love was the plan,
And Love was the competent artisan,
No lease was signed by these happy folk,
No rent was required by their Landlord Oak,
All at no charges and all of the best,—
The world’s biggest bargain is surely a nest
13. Real Estate
by Amos Russel Wells
My real estate is birds and flowers,
And sweeps of summer sky,
And shining holy morning hours,
And breezes passing by.
My most unreal estate is dirt,
With houses piled on top,
Reckoned in figures bare and curt,
And smelling of the shop.
My real estate is never spent,
its titles all are clear,
it pays a wonderful per cent
By day and month and year.
it needs no fence of iron or wood,
No agent must he hired.
its price—that it be understood,
its tax—to be admired.
While I am rich in real estate,
Away with that inert
ignoble and degenerate
Unreal estate of dirt!
14. Contented John
by Jane Taylor
One honest John Tomkins, a hedger and ditcher,
Although he was poor, did not want to be richer;
For all such vain wishes in him were prevented
By a fortunate habit of being contented.
Though cold were the weather, or dear were the food,
John never was found in a murmuring mood;
For this he was constantly heard to declare,—
What he could not prevent he would cheerfully bear.
“For why should I grumble and murmur?” he said;
“If I cannot get meat, I’ll be thankful for bread;
And, though fretting may make my calamities deeper,
It can never cause bread and cheese to be cheaper.”
If John was afflicted with sickness or pain,
He wished himself better, but did not complain,
Nor lie down to fret in despondence and sorrow,
But said that he hoped to be better to-morrow.
If anyone wronged him or treated him ill,
Why, John was good-natured and sociable still;
For he said that revenging the injury done
Would be making two rogues when there need be but one.
And thus honest John, though his station was humble,
Passed through this sad world without even a grumble;
And I wish that some folks, who are greater and richer,
Would copy John Tomkins, the hedger and ditcher.
15. Cleon and I
by Charles Mackay
Cleon hath ten thousand acres,
Ne’er a one have I;
Cleon dwelleth in a palace,
In a cottage, I;
Cleon hath a dozen fortunes,
Not a penny, I,
Yet the poorer of the twain is
Cleon, and not I.
Cleon, true, possesseth acres,
But the landscape, I;
Half the charms to me it yieldeth
Money cannot buy;
Cleon harbors sloth and dullness,
Freshening vigor, I;
He in velvet, I in fustian—
Richer man am I.
Cleon is a slave to grandeur,
Free as thought am I;
Cleon fees a score of doctors,
Need of none have I;
Wealth-surrounded, care-environed,
Cleon fears to die;
Death may come—he’ll find me ready,
Happier man am I.
Cleon sees no charms in nature,
In a daisy, I;
Cleon hears no anthems ringing
‘Twixt the sea and sky;
Nature sings to me forever,
Earnest listener, I;
State for state, with all attendants—
Who would change?—Not I.
16. The Shepherd Boy Sings in the Valley of Humiliation
by John Bunyan
He that is down needs fear no fall,
He that is low, no pride;
He that is humble ever shall
Have God to be his guide.
I am content with what I have,
Little be it or much:
And, Lord, contentment still I crave,
Because Thou savest such.
Fullness to such a burden is
That go on pilgrimage:
Here little, and hereafter bliss,
Is best from age to age.
Short Poems about Money
Money has an important role in our lives, and it can be both a blessing and a curse. Here are some simple poems on money that explore these themes.
1. We Aren’t Got No Money, Honey, but We Got Rain
by Charles Bukowski
I particularly remember the rains of the
Depression era.
There wasn’t any money but there was
Plenty of rain.
It wouldn’t rain for just a night or
A day,
It would RAIN for 7 days and 7 nights.
2. Money, O!
by W.H. Davies
When I had money, money, O!
I knew no joy till I went poor;
For many a false man as a friend
Came knocking all day at my door.
3. Velocity of Money
by Allen Ginsberg
Delighted by inflation that drives me out on the street
After all what good’s the family farm, why eat turkey by thousands every
Thanksgiving?
Why not have Star Wars? Why have the same old America?
4. Worry about Money
by Kathleen Raine
But life itself wakes me each morning, and love
Urges me to give although I have no money
In the bank at this moment, and ought properly
To cease to exist in a world where poverty
Is a shameful and ridiculous offence.
Read more poems of Kathleen Raine.
5. On A Handful of French Money
by Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Even as these coins, so are these lives and years
Mixed and bewildered; yet hath each of them
No less its part in what is come to be
For France. Empire, Republic, Monarchy,—
Each clamours or keeps silence in her name,
And lives within the pulse that now is hers.
6. Death and Taxes
by Sidney Hall
Now that I’m dead I can finally relax,
Worry free of April 15th and filing my income tax.
Poems about Money for Birthdays
Celebrate your loved one’s birthday with a money poem for birthdays! Here you can find inspiring and meaningful poems about the value of money and the joy of giving.
1. My Dad Won the Lottery
by Caren Krutsinger
My dad won the lottery Sultan announces to his third-grade class.
There are gasps all around, the other eight-year-olds are amazed.
How much? One of the brighter youngsters’ yells.
“Six billion or more,” he says giving a flashy wave.
“Want to come to my birthday party?” ask another bright lightbulb.
“When is it?”
“Next Saturday, all the other kids are invited.”
The teacher says nothing.
“We are buying a mansion,” Sultan tells his classmates.
“I get to design my own room.”
His family is perhaps the poorest family in the school.
They have several children, and they are in transition aka homeless.
The teacher continues working on their gift baskets.
Understanding that sometimes the poorest children have the largest stories.
2. A Smuggler Speaks
by Chinedum Ekwobi
Enough of a struggle,
When we banned goods smuggle
To against riches snuggle
And soon sound The Bugle
Enough of struggle:
Lots of body wriggle
For Danes’ Illicit Gin
That would lots of lips win:
South Africa Necklace
In Gold dressed like a lace…
In my mind a rifle
But its mention stifle:
Brushes with The Customs
Seizing people’s bottoms;
Curses of their custom
Of sparing not An Atom…
Ahead kicking kidneys
To down force one on knees
My birthday with whole chicken
Today is exactly The Day
I said I must find my way
Out of a Taxed Uterus,
With odds getting numerous:
Fifty-Two not Twenty-Five
Splendid to be still alive!
A Uterus that saw Hell,
When I started sounding my bell;
Doctor sure ‘The Post-Mature’
Now responding to Nature
A Most Terrible Bleeding,
Even as she kept pleading,
The time: Night’s 11: 15
Of A Rainy June 15
And I heard: staying at church
While Nigerian Bombs did search…
3. One Life
by Paula Goldsmith
There have been those who said,
what a privileged life you have.
People only see what they want to see,
jealousy is a terrible thing.
Jealousy makes you ugly shades of green,
as you are totally consumed.
Where were you when I cried all night long,
only to find an alligator tear soaked pillow in the morning.
Where were you when we were married on thirty-five dollars,
no car~home or jobs.
I had no breakfast,
on Friday I would split a grilled cheese sandwich for lunch.
People have been meaner than I can write,
their words and actions with much delight.
I learned from two ladies,
they both had very similar lives.
Both should have been filled,
with hate.
One was,
it ruined her life.
The other lady,
kept love~happiness all around.
Hurt is a troubling thing,
life is filled with all kinds of hurt.
Some hurt you can see,
some hurt you cannot see.
Hurt is still hurt,
it fills one with pain~tears.
As for the second lady,
I also believe in love~happiness all around.
I love to give smiles out,
did you know they are Free???
I say~never judge a person on what you see,
you may find an alligator tear soaked pillow in their bed just like me.
4. Evil Emerges
by Kashmiri Kashmiri
When the vaygina is torn
When a hypocrite is born
Evil Emerges.
5. Pay Day
by Paula Goldsmith
I often wonder,
just how much one is expected take.
Some spout off,
so very easily.
Some take much,
then they explode.
I guess the question is,
how much is too much.
How long should one put up with it,
whatever it is.
After not being paid repeatedly,
and getting paid would take up to six months.
I guess you can say,
I had~had enough.
Every time I explained I had not been paid,
no one seemed to care.
This is not right,
I was working for free.
My computer and I had a hot midnight date,
typing away to say just what I wanted to say.
I said I had enough rather than stoop to their level,
I was just leaving Good-bye from me.
6. Nobody Knows Who Your Players Are
by Gershon Wolf
Halfway through summer
You delivered a bummer
Sold off all your big stars
Nobody knows
who your new players are
Last night’s game?
You lost Ten-to-Nothing
Today you scored more
Something like 17 to 4
Poor fans have nothing to cheer
We just cry in our beer
But, I’ll come watch anyway
‘Course, my ticket YOU’LL pay
~ I wasn’t born yesterday!
7. Money
by Paula Goldsmith
Money is all around
On the floor and on the ground
Never let it make you go round and round
Even you can buy a jeweled crown
You know it is only paper so do not frown
8. A Token-Coin
by Paula Goldsmith
When I started to date,
a token-coin I was given.
I was told to hide it in my purse,
never but never spend it away.
If you ever need to call home,
your token-coin will save the day.
I never needed that token-coin,
tucked away safe and sound.
It was always there,
where it belonged.
One day I cleaned out my purse,
I found that old token-coin.
As I began to rub it,
all the years flashed by.
I then realized all the love,
given in that token-coin to keep by my side.
9. Watered Down Juice
by Paula Goldsmith
I can still remember when I was nine,
the boy across the street made a sign.
His mother made pitchers of a drink aid,
the cars would stop and we were paid.
We always said a big thank you,
many came back day after day we knew.
A business off the street we now ran,
it would have been great if we had a fan.
The days and sun were really hot,
a cold and refreshing drink they bought.
We did split fifty fifty of the cash,
a ton of cups made bags of trash.
We started selling really young,
as we yelled to cars with our tongue.
I can remember that summer well,
our skin needed a lot of healing gel.
10. Just Thinking about this Past Year
by Paula Goldsmith
Just thinking about this past year has taught me a few things,
new rules to live by.
In life we put off doing until tomorrow-next week-next year,
and why is this?
Maybe we are busy-feel we do not have the time-need more money,
the list goes on and on.
I will wait no more,
I am doing.
I saw firsthand how short time is,
time for me and for others.
I will wait no more,
it needs to be done today.
Tomorrow will not come for many,
I want my life more complete.
New rules to live by,
today is my day so enjoying it.
Poems about Money That Rhyme
This collection of poems focuses on the different aspects of money – from its power to its pitfalls. Enjoy reading these poems that are composed in rhyme.
1. It Isn’t Costly
by Edgar A. Guest
Does the grouch get richer quicker than the friendly sort of man?
Can the grumbler labor better than the cheerful fellow can?
Is the mean and churlish neighbor any cleverer than the one
Who shouts a glad “good morning” and then smiling passes on?
Just stop and think about it. Have you ever known or seen
A mean man who succeeded, just because he was so mean?
When you find a grouch with honors and with money in his pouch,
You can bet he didn’t win them just because he was a grouch.
Oh, you’ll not be any poorer if you smile along your way,
And your lot will not be harder for the kindly things you say.
Don’t imagine you are wasting time for others that you spend:
You can rise to wealth and glory and still pause to be a friend.
2. The Root of All Evil?
Catherine Pulsifer
Is money the root of all evil
Does anything even equal?
The answer my friend is “no”
But let this poem show:
The “love” of money is the problem
It can take your life to the bottom
You may have material things
But your love for it – nothing it brings.
You see money cannot buy happiness
Nor can it make you feel blessed.
Helping others, sharing your money
Can help other in others being happy.
In this world of ours, greed
Doesn’t feel any need
There is enough for everyone
But only a few have a fortune.
You see money can be taken away
And if that is all you have, you will be dismayed
The people in your life who care
Who love you, money can’t compare.
But if you let those relationships failed
In search of money, you won’t prevail
You will end up with false friends
And if you lose your money that’s the end.
So share your wealth do not hoard
And make sure you give back to the Lord
As when your life comes to an end
Money will not comfort you or life extend!
So share your wealth do not hoard
3. The Man Who Couldn’t Save
by Edgar A. Guest
He spent what he made, or he gave it away,
Tried to save money, and would for a day,
Started a bank-account time an’ again.
Got a hundred or so for a nest egg, an’ then
Some fellow that needed it more than he did.
Who was down on his luck, with a sick wife or kid.
Came along an’ he wasted no time till he went
An’ drew out the coin that for saving was meant.
They say he died poor, and I guess that is so:
To pile up a fortune he hadn’t a show;
He worked all the time and good money he made,
Was known as an excellent man at his trade,
But he saw too much, heard too much, felt too much here
To save anything by the end of the year.
An’ the shabbiest wreck the Lord ever let live
Could get money from him if he had it to give.
I’ve seen him slip dimes to the bums on the street
Who told him they hungered for something to eat,
An’ though I remarked they were going for drink
He’d say: “Mebbe so. But I’d just hate to think
That fellow was hungry an’ Id passed him by;
I’d rather be fooled twenty times by a lie
Than wonder if one of ’em I wouldn’t feed
Had told me the truth an’ was really in need.”
Never stinted his family out of a thing:
They had everything that his money could bring;
Said he’d rather be broke and just know they were glad,
Than rich, with them pining an’ wishing they had
Some of the pleasures his money would buy;
Said he never could look a bank book in the eye
If he knew it had grown on the pleasures and joys
That he’d robbed from his wife and his girls and his boys.
Queer sort of notion he had, I confess,
Yet many a rich man on earth is mourned less.
All who had known him came back to his side
to honor his name on the day that he died.
Didn’t leave much in the bank, it is true.
But did leave a fortune in people who knew
the big heart of him, an’ I’m willing to swear
that to-day he is one of the richest up there.
4. Money
by Arthur Fanklin Fuller
Money – Money – Money –
Once I sought the jingling hoard-stuff,
Heard its siren tinkle sounding,
Felt the lust that makes men battle,
Disregard all save achievement;
Every muscle, nerve and talent,
Bent to winning sordid treasures
Scorning peace and homelier pleasures.
Blinding eyes to Nature’s doings.
Deafening ears to song-bird’s wooings.
Longing, feverish, for that great hour.
When should sound at their dictation
Siren tones that conquer most men –
Make them slaves as I have been.
Money – Money – Money –
Well I knew its magic jingle,
Sweet, elusive as its mother;
Tameless, lawless, who may hold her?
Wings she taketh, swift and silent,
Leaving subtly, without warning –
Cruel as a woman’s scorning.
Money! how the sound did lure me –
Made me bow to my task-master.
Fiercely guard each hard won vantage-
Long it baffled my endeavors;
But in time I gained the summit –
Form-ed a gold-tide, watched the scramble –
Made a test of what ‘twould buy me.
Money – Money – Money –
Disapproving frowns now vanished;
Doors that had been closed, now opened –
Haughty ways were changed to fawning;
Strangers boasted long acquaintance,
Pledged their everlasting friendship;
Balls, receptions, in my honor.
Signs of favor without number.
Sped the time, fulfilled my longings.
Turned such appetite to loathing;
Satan laughing, scoffing, sneering,
Watched the fall my hopes were taking;
All this lacked the ring of true steel –
Echoed only siren tinkle.
Money – Money – Money –
When the silly, vapid laughter
Died away and left me stranded,
When the dance had turned to fool-play,
And the dinners changed to hell-feasts.
When I saw the drifting favor,
Pierced the shallowness and pretense.
Soft I heard a voice of music,
Sounding like a voice from Heaven;
Knew a hand-clasp, heard the joy-tone
Of a heart’s sincere devotion.
Then I knew that gold and silver
Bring no joy to feed the hunger
Of a heart that yearns for trueness.
Money – Money – Money –
Blessed be the day you left me –
Now I laugh at Satan’s luring;
I have learned the truer values –
Count my treasures in the tresses
Gold as sunset – crowning glory
Of a vision fair as wholesome –
Mark the rubies of her rose lips,
Love the turquois ‘neath her lashes,
Love the smile that shows her pearl teeth;
Love the privilege of love-clasp,
Love her graceful form, and yielding;
Love her sweet ways, loving service.
Love the blessing of her nearness.
Money – Money – Money –
What a silly, teasing earth-god;
Bringing discontent to thousands;
Bribing, tempting, cursing many.
Tinkle, tinkle, clinking silver-
Chime your sweetest, yellow gold-stuffs,
I have treasures far above you;
Far more precious than you all.
I’ve a queen that knows my ardor,
Loves my love and care and labor:
Treasures, treasures, boundless, worthy;
Here my whole heart glad, enslaved is:
Here my jewels, gold and silver;
Life flows peaceful as a river.
5. Money
by John Kendrick Bangs
Money comes, and money goes.
Where it goes to, goodness knows;
Feeds us, clothes us, pays the rent;
Sometimes borrowed, often lent;
Makes a pleasant, jingly sound;
Rather nice to have around.
But it never kept a friend!
Broken hearts ’twill never mend.
As a substitute for Right
Frequently it heaves in sight;
But it is a substitute
That holds mighty bitter fruit.
Misers hoard it; tyrants rule
When they use it for a tool;
And for want of it the roar
Of the Wolf comes to the door.
6. I Will Take All I Can Get
by Adeniji Toluwalope Gideon
Since it holds me free of debt.
I’ll respect it for its power
To relieve some pressing hour.
But for worship — well, for me
God forbid that that should be!
Must Money Make Man Mad
Must money make man mad?
Money makes man mad
Meanwhile, man made money
Must millions make man mad?
Massive money many mention
Mighty materials, man’s main mandate
Making many mentally magnetic
Mean money might mar man
Con-men crave catching cash consistently
Committing crimes continuously
Consequently, they’re caught, captured, killed
While we wonder where we’re
We want wealth which withers
When we wouldn’t wake
We wouldn’t work without weighing ways
When we weigh madness with mildness
We would work with wisdom
When we work wisely,
We would win
7. Hey, That’s My Money
by Robert L. Hinshaw
Well, I see that Congress is proposin’ another trillion dollar spree!
Those inept buffoons must think money grows upon a tree!
The treasury is crankin’ out bales of twenty-dollar bills,
Doin’ their part to cure (and inflate) the nation’s many ills!
Funds were ‘loaned’ to help carmakers, now they’re hollerin’ fer more!
A ton of dough was ‘loaned’ to banks, but ain’t nobody keepin’ score!
Millions was designated to help home foreclosures to abate.
Where has my money gone? I’ve seen minimal results to date!
Funds are proposed fer more sand fer the beaches of New Joisey,
And city officials want a water park out west in frigid Boise!
Frenzied lobbyists are scurryin’ about fer a portion of the pork,
To build an emergency landin’ strip on the Hudson in New York!
Money is probably well-spent fer roads, bridges and agin’ sewers,
But spare me the cost of subsidizin’ sports arenas and sozzled brewers.
Lack of foresight by the banks and politicians got us in this mess,
Now they cover their boondoggles with my money, nonetheless!
Hordes of politicians gleefully gather at the bottomless trough,
Elbowin’ others fer largesse they claim will make us better off.
Is there no end to compensatory spendin’ and open-ended lendin’?
Hey! That’s my money you fellers are so very inept at spendin’!
8. Money
by Ness Tillson
Money money, ringing in your tills,
Calling us to worship,
The hundred dollar bills.
Bend our knees in wonder,
Bow our heads in awe,
At the power of the liar,
Who now controls us all.
From the darkest deep caverns,
To the stars in the sky,
From the infinite universe,
To the strangers passing by.
From your inner most conviction,
To your laughing in the night,
From everything you’re seeing,
To everything out of sight.
The new God has risen,
To claim the holy throne,
The one that we have emptied,
Our hearts all cold as stone.
The throne that we have emptied,
We killed the rightful king,
Sold his crown an sceptre,
Pawned his sacred ring.
Raised his bleeding body,
Up on that bloody hill,
The silent lamb still bleeding,
As the money fills your tills.
10. Lady on the Church Steps
by Warren Doll
I had seen her before in the spring and summer
The homeless lady sitting on the church steps
She would ask for help from people going into the church
She mostly was given spare change and occasionally a dollar or two
No matter how small the amount given, she would give a genuine smile and say thank you
The last time I saw her was a December around Christmas
It was very cold and she was shivering in a tattered, light weight, coat
She began to walk toward me and I could see that she was very frail.
I hurried to her. I was afraid that her legs might fail
Seeing her that way, the terrible reality of her suffering, struck me to the core
I gave her all the money that I had with me that day
She was surprised and said I want to give you a gift.
I will tell you my real name.
Realizing this was the only thing of real value that she had left, I hesitated.
She smiled, hugged me, and then whispered Linda into my ear.
After that day, I never saw her again and couldn’t find out what happened to her.
But, I will never forget Linda and her most perfect Christmas gift.
Poems about Money and Work
Poems about work and money explores the complexities of money and work and their roles in our lives. Through these works, we can gain insight into how these two powerful forces shape our lives.
1. The Instruction Manual
by John Ashbery’s
As I sit looking out of a window of the building
I wish I did not have to write the instruction manual on the uses
of a new metal.
I look down into the street and see people, each walking with an
inner peace,
And envy them–they are so far away from me!
Not one of them has to worry about getting out this manual on
Schedule.
2. Hay for the Horses
by Gary Snyder’s
“I’m sixty-eight” he said,
“I first bucked hay when I was seventeen.
I thought, that day I started,
I sure would hate to do this all my life.
And dammit, that’s just what
I’ve gone and done.”
3. Leave New York
by Joshua Beckman
Do not spend $1.00 on two scallion pancakes.
Do not hail a ten dollar cab to blow off steam
and smoke his back seat up
and watch the meter jump by quarters.
Do not spend $7.50 on Axe Handles by Gary Snyder
Do not spend $35.00 on the collected anyone.
4. The Secretary Chant
by Piercy
My hips are a desk.
From my ears hang
chains of paper clips.
Rubber bands form my hair.
My breasts are wells of mimeograph ink.
My feet bear casters.
Buzz. Click.
5. Real Riches
by Emily Dickinson
‘T is little I could care for pearls
Who own the ample sea;
Or brooches, when the Emperor
With rubies pelteth me;
Or gold, who am the Prince of Mines;
Or diamonds, when I see
A diadem to fit a dome
Continual crowning me.
6. Bequest
by Emily Dickinson
You left me, sweet, two legacies,
A legacy of love
A Heavenly Father would content,
Had He the offer of;
You left me boundaries of pain
Capacious as the sea,
Between eternity and time,
Your consciousness and me.
7. Your Riches Taught Me Poverty
by Emily Dickinson
Your riches taught me poverty.
Myself a millionnaire
In little wealths, — as girls could boast, —
Till broad as Buenos Ayre,
You drifted your dominions
A different Peru;
And I esteemed all poverty,
For life’s estate with you.
Of mines I little know, myself,
But just the names of gems, —
The colors of the commonest;
And scarce of diadems
So much that, did I meet the queen,
Her glory I should know:
But this must be a different wealth,
To miss it beggars so.
I’m sure ‘t is India all day
To those who look on you
Without a stint, without a blame, —
Might I but be the Jew!
I’m sure it is Golconda,
Beyond my power to deem, —
To have a smile for mine each day,
How better than a gem!
At least, it solaces to know
That there exists a gold,
Although I prove it just in time
Its distance to behold!
It’s far, far treasure to surmise,
And estimate the pearl
That slipped my simple fingers through
While just a girl at school!
8. The Prospector
by N. Howard Thorp
Twelve years have I lived in this desolate place,
Far from all habitation—not even a face
Have I seen, save Apaches, those unwelcome guests,
Pass me by as I work with my pick in the breast.
Am I one of the millions whose brain-string has snapped,
Who sees visions of gold in those canyons unmapped,
Unexplored, unprospected, that lay just ahead,
Near the Arc of the Bow where so many lie dead?
Like all miners I ve visions, which may someday come true,
Of where I would go and what I would do—
If I’d but once find the vein which carries the ore,
My days of hard work would forever be o’er.
There’s a frenzy of fury that boils in one’s veins—
Will it pay for the hardships, will it pay for my pains?
‘T is a distorted finger that beckons, it seems,
To the land of illusions, the place of my dreams.
Poems about Money and Happiness
In this collection of poems, we will explore the complex relationship between money and happiness, examining how the two can intersect or diverge.
1. Money and Happiness
by Teresa Dearing
I had a friend who had alot,
And very happy she was not.
Then she lost it all one day,
And now she morns her life away.
I have never had a lot,
And ofte’ it’s left me in a spot,
But I am sure with banking clout,
Wonderful happiness would find me out.
But in memories, it’s the times without,
That warm my heart and stand right out.
Mayhaps happiness has more to do,
With the life you live, than what have you.
2. Mr. and Mrs. Santa
by Suburban Lovechild
Why was Santa dressed like the Easter bunny?
he wanted to run away with his honey.
Mrs. Claus had a red nose that was funny,
when she took off with the money.
3. 5 Place
by Anonymous
Everything has a fee
Everything has a fee,
Nothing on Earth’s for free,
There is no relation,
Without compensation,
Unless it’s just me versus me.
Something always involves cost,
From breathing to auto exhaust,
Imagine, people mating,
Without use of call waiting,
Millions of yen would be lost.
Even intangibles hold value,
A smile from the wind, a song on the bayou,
If you yell at your spouse,
Well, there goes the house,
The true meaning of “I do, I do”.
Life is a pay-per-view event,
Due to our voyeuristic intent,
We can’t cross the street,
To keep matters discrete,
All we have is fiscal repent.
4. Riches Have Wings
by Jo Daniel
Don’t run after money,
It acts very funny,
It is there, then it’s not,
though it is often sought,
Riches make themselves wings
and fly away. It stings,
they never stay with you,
Unfaithful, never true,
Like an eagle, they fly,
you are left then to sigh!
Don’t run after money,
it’s simply baloney!
Disappearing from sight,
Like an eagle, takes flight,
It will leave you behind,
Huffing, puffing and blind,
Sprouting wings of its own,
It is known to have flown,
Take heed to my advice,
Wealth chasers pay their price!
5. Priceless
by Wendy Horder
No lottery win
Could ever begin
To compare
With love so rare
No amount of money
That’s almost funny
Give thanks to the Lord
For this my reward
Nothing touches my heart
Of my life, such a part
lt makes me feel whole
Plays a wonderful role
lt gives me strength to carry on
As my life moves along
Music to my ears
Dispels any fears
lt fills me with pride
Always on my side
For me especially
My priceless Family.
6. Green Machine
by Eric Nolan
In this world
We all put a price on our honey
We rent our labor, what’s between our legs and under our nose
We all work it’s just how it goes
The world’s oldest profession
As everyone knows
We are all for sale
To the mighty dollar
We all hail
Without it slave
You will fail
To that dirty green paper
We all hail
It’s a great daily caper
Of catch and release
Trying our best
It’s your wallet I fleece
Gotta get in there and rape the green
And get out fast hopefully unseen
You will never get ahead
In dollars or sense
Your worth for today
Is already past tense
Its funny to me
To try and reap the cream
and chase crumbs daily
Or so it would seem
But necessary is this mundane grind
To live for today
And enter tomorrows financial bind
Of once again
Playing moneys tug of war
Pursuing currency is such a bore
A rotten addiction of give me more
We are all simply
Greedy cash whores
7. Money is Loved by Many
Mv Venkataraman
I am surely not after money
Like a bee after sweet honey
This World is to me funny
Here riches make life sunny
For money all are deeply craving
And so are very crookedly behaving
For ten generations are just saving
Poor man’s chances, they are shaving
They spend money like a lunatic
And are thinking like an eccentric
Currency notes make them ecstatic
They appear to me damn pathetic
They squander money on luxury
Care not for those in penury
They are always in a hurry
For them I feel greatly sorry
Father and mother will be hungry
Toward them, they will be angry
To feed parents, they won’t agree
Their hearts are shabbily ugly
They will lead a lavish life-style
To none, kind words, they will mail
To show generosity, they will fail
From devil greed, they will ail.
8. Funny Money
Duke Beaufort
What’s simple and not so complex?
Rich spokespeople hawked FTX
Crypto they’d assure
Is so safe and secure
It would never bounce anyone’s checks.
Poems about Money and Love
This collection of poems explores the relationship between money and love, delving into the complexities of the two entwined forces.
1. For Love and Money
by Shanto Armonde
The wicked love of money
Impels us to embark
On a dark and endless journey.
Overwhelmed by vicious temptation
We pursue that receding goal,
Until we’re well beyond salvation.
Money can buy others’ respect.
It can make us feel
complete and perfect.
Money can buy love and joy
Although our innocence,
It does destroy.
Eyes bound, and cruelly blinded,
With violent drive and desire,
We race on, alone and unguided.
Slowly starving the soul inside
Of love, succumbing to fatal
Hopes, yet swelling with pride.
Only in the end do we begin to learn,
To love the harsh times lived,
And not the money that we earn.
2. Money Advice
by Nsikak Andrew
Again, do not make money
the determining factor in your marriage.
The moment you begin to fight
over the control of money
then your marriage is heading for the rock.
Money shouldn’t be the bone of contentment
or neither that of contention in your marriage.
If you allowed money to determine
the extent of your love, then be ready
to always be in a fight and constant argument
over irrelevant things that will only add up
to no meaningful thing in your marriage.
3. Selfishness in Marriage
by Nsikak Andrew
Those who are selfish
only have one reward in their marriage
and that is to live in self-deceit
time over time again.
The element of trust
is lost the moment you
become so selfish in your marriage.
This is what will only make you
think of self and self alone
without caring for the other.
In marriage you need
to work together to achieve your purpose
and not to feel that you can do it all alone.
The moment you allowed selfishness
to rule your home just be ready
For the danger that is coming ahead.
4. Right Formula
by Nsikak Andrew
Marriage is like a two way traffic
which requires the source
for living together have
to flow from both side.
Do not live all work to one person.
See to it that you help in contributing
your quota towards making the marriage work.
When you both contribute
in no measure towards keeping the home,
you will find peace around without much labour
but where one person is made
to be seen as the sole provider,
then there is a challenge looming ahead.
Both couples should be involved
in taking care of the family.
It shouldn’t be one person job all alone.
The moment the other person
finds the needed support, the joy
and zeal to go all the way will always be there.
5. Your Association
by Nsikak Andrew
When you come in contact
with wrong people and you begin
to associate yourself with them,
what you will learn from such association
is what would impact your life in a negative way.
Associating with wrong people
would only bring to you wrong advice
which would become detrimental
if applied in your home.
Wrong advice would never contribute
any meaningful thing to your marriage.
Infact what that would bring about
is constant infighting that would not
add any value but rather would seek
to destroy the unity that runs at home.
6. Spending Habit
by Nsikak Andrew
When you are not able
to differentiate between your needs and wants;
then it becomes a problem at home.
You need to control your spending habit
and shouldn’t become frivolous about it.
When you spend without limit
and can’t differentiate your needs and wants
on what you are spending on,
then building your home to achieve
the basic necessity of life becomes a problem.
Money that is meant to build the home
and provide the necessary things of life
should not be that which you spend anyhow.
You should be able to build assets and not liabilities.
In spending you need to be prudent.
When you are prudent, it helps you save
and also differentiate between your needs and wants.
You shouldn’t spend because others are spending.
You need to be a wise spender
and this should be one things
that add much value to your home.
And if you should borrow for any purpose,
it should be for things that creates asset
and not for thing that brings about liability.
When you borrow to spend for frivolous things
it will add no gain to you but rather would make you
become a constant borrower and someone
Who would always be indebted all the time?
7. Seek Knowledge
by Nsikak Andrew
If you want to safe your marriage
from eminent collapse,
then you need to seek constant knowledge
on how to improve your relationship
and make it the best for others to envy.
If you rely on what you know years back,
such might not be relevant
at this moment of a changing generation.
You need to go for knowledge concerning
areas that is affecting the bliss of your marital life.
When you constantly improve yourself
in the areas that needs attention,
you will not only keep your home
but would be looked upon as someone
that has answers to any nagging issues.
When you read, listen to messages
that improve your level of reasoning
and of all apply such to your circumstances,
you would not only be happy for it
but would also become a delightsome land.
8. Saving and Investment in Marriage
by Nsikak Andrew
Saving and investment keeps you away
from poverty in your marriage.
If you refuse to neither save nor invest,
then be ready to find poverty knocking
at your door constantly.
The reason you should save and also invest
is to constantly provide for your family
without having any reason for failure.
Do not see investment as a risky venture
but rather you should seek
for knowledge and invest wisely.
Investment would help you multiple
your income and also make you
financially worthy which is what will
bulletproof you against rainy days.
When you fail to invest against rainy days,
when such occurs which it might likely be,
then at such time, you wouldn’t have
what to fall back on.
And this could become disastrous
to your health and the peace of mind
that should flow in your marriage.
Invest for rainy days for this is
one way to fight against poverty.
9. Amend From Mistake
by Nsikak Andrew
When you make mistakes,
do not dwell on your mistakes.
The moment you realized
you have made a mistakes,
then at that point,
you need to start making amend.
When you keep dwelling
on your mistake without making
conscious effort to amend from it,
then you would still dwell
on making such mistake which to you
might become normal.
Mistakes made are for you to learn from them
and not to keep repeating such mistakes
as if it is a normal way of life.
When you keep making the same mistake,
it makes your life become boring
and wouldn’t add any improvement
to your level in life.
Though mistakes draws you back
but if you learn and avoid them,
your life would greatly improve beyond any doubt.
If you make mistake,
it is not an excuse for you not to try again.
When you make mistake,
realize it, make amend and try again.
When you try again,
you gather experience and would avoid
such which would become
not only a blessing to your life
but also to your marriage.
The bottom line
is not for you to dwell on your mistakes
but to work against it so as
to achieve greatness in what so ever you do.
10. Timing in Marriage
by Nsikak Andrew
Time management is of essence
if you want to bulletproof
your marriage against failure.
Do the things you need to do
and at the right time to avoid
unnecessary conflict at home.
When you constantly manage your time well,
you will have a home were peace reign.
The moment everyone involved
knows what to do and at the right time,
then there wouldn’t be need
for unnecessary exchange of words
that wouldn’t bring about
any meaningful contribution at home.
Your time is what activates the achievement
of any given purpose in your life.
If you fail to manage your time,
you might fail to manage your life.
Learn to invest in your time
for productive output rather than spend it
doing nothing that could contribute
to a better you in life.
Sometimes, the things
that bring about exchange of words at home
are lack of proper time management.
When couples couldn’t allocate the right time
to get things done at home,
then it becomes a recurrent problem
that would always derail
the smooth running of affair at home.
When you manage your time well,
you make life and things easier to handle.
Poems about Money and Greed
Here these poems explore the relationship between money and love, delving into the complexities of the two entwined forces.
1. Money Chain
by Rudolph Rinaldi
My parents’ repeated refrain –
“Money doesn’t grow on trees.”
In my dreams, a lush tree grew
with leaves of high numbers,
nothing under a twenty.
On our 25th Anniversary,
our church threw
a surprise party.
After the pot-luck dinner,
a gaily wrapped gift box
sported a top slit, waving
a bit of green. As we pulled,
a chain of bills roped up
through the slot, coiling
ribbons of green.
I had seen “Money Trees”
as special occasion gifts,
but for the one and only
time, we experienced the gift
of “Money in a Box.”
2. My Confession
by Ryan Graham
I am led by desire
I desire this
I desire that
I desire everything
that all my friends’
have and desire
because
someone else has and desires it
God
I know I have no use
for most of it
but I must have it
I desire life
but not death
for the fear of it
I desire life because
most my friends have it and want it
and fear death because
most of my friends fear it
God
when I am dead
maybe I will desire nothing
because all my dead friends
will most likely desire nothing
and hopefully
we will most likely have no use
for any of it
then God
what will become of it?
3. Broke
by David Sollis
Here lies my wallet.
On my desk he sleeps.
His malnourished stomach’s
been empty for weeks.
No family survived him.
There is only me,
With no way to pay off
his burial fee.
4. Gold Digger
by Barbara Gorelick
half his age
and nearly twice his
height
pretty as a picture
but none too bright
he loves her open
arms (and legs) –
his “tart”
spread-eagled on his
sports-car’s bonnet
She likes him for
His open mind and
Open heart
But most of all –
His open wallet
She intends to stick
With him through
Thick and thicker
and is most
“Concerned” about
his dodgy ticker
5. Lust Money
by Lillian-Yvonne Bertram
That slick monster sat down with us all.
A man wants to know mouth-first
what my face does looking at him,
if my eyes are cogitating wells
of sweet soup. He imagines me forward
then bent as in over. The idea is I’ll say yes,
go to the car for unbuttoning
but a wife flashed back in the way.
So I don’t visit the details of convention.
When I say I like a man who knows
what he wants, there’s nothing more
about him to like. Nowhere else to be,
I stand under the snow face-
first, the mouth my summoning shrine.
6. Money and Greed
by Gangadharan Nair Pulingat
A man of prosperity
He was having dexterity
Enough he earned in money
Little he gave to the needy
Or relative and friends
Those who were very poor
Even to his kith and kin.
He prospered in such speed
Together he was in greed
For money and gold gained
But still unhappy and bad mood
No one was devoted to him
Even his best half in dejection
Still he loved his money
All was well for years
Hypnotized on influence of money
Delectable events slowly lost
He became ill for ever
Even to drink water difficult
Swallow food was not easy
The day came, his death time
People says his eyes were not closed
May be looking for money
The safety notions in thoughts
Even the last moments of journey.
7. Greed and Money
by Kailee Heckathorn
Greed… Is half of humanity, the other is money.
Could humans fix the corrupted senses of it’s own soul,
And heal the mental outer body of our full self?
No we can’t because that’s what makes us human.
Money will never buy one enternal happiness,
But is money serving as a distraction to further intelligence or is it just all life is and will be.
Greed and money will always be there, but it’s up to us to control it.
Poems about Money and Power
Money and power are two key elements of life that can have a great impact on our lives. This poem collection will explore their relationship and the effects of having them or not.
1. Money Power
by Shashank Dwivedi
Money is the need of life
Everyone loves this, either mother or wife
Yes, it is very lovable-
Why not, as it gives us respect and make us able
We can buy every precious thing
And some say, if you have money only then have “Honey”
We can by-pass any law and order-
Using money and speak louder
But money cannot replace truth
Yet it can hide it on mysterious earth
It cannot make us to sleep
But it can make us to weep
Money is the dust of our hand
Which will be washed away when we wash hand
Money can make us respectful
But it cannot make us truthful
Money should not be treated as everything
Or we will miss truthness of worldly things
Everything should not be done just for some money
Or we will miss love of others, which will make us funny
Earn money don’t pride of it
Love money don’t do crime for it
Or God will make distance from you
You are his only son, is the truthest true
Money is not life but life is money
The tour of life is very “Turny”
Humanity is the first duty of ours
Search for truth and get success in yours Life’s Tour
2. Just Stating the Obvious
by Paula Goldsmith
“Just Stating the Obvious from Years Gone Bye”
Over the many years
there have been many fears
good-bad times with tears
Children once were a delight
they were very polite
had respect both day and night
Prices were much less
money went for a dress
could save more without stress
People worked hard
they were proud of their backyard
work made them a diehard
they say back then was greater
now that it is much later
maybe yes maybe no let’s ask the alligator
The world is upside down
I am living in it all around
let’s go back before we drown
A time when things made sense
people were kind and not tense
kids were not on the defense
where are we now
must everything be allowed
tomorrow will be here very soon-oh wow
3. Money Means Power
by Grant Horst
It’s all part of a bigger problem, namely the dollar sign
Our wealth we’re given is merely determined by our blood line
The rich sit mighty high in the sky and dine
While the lessers scour for nickels and dimes
They spend all day wondering which car to drive
While we wonder if we have enough food to survive
They crack wise about their expensive wine
While we sit and buff our dishes that can’t shine
We all dream of conquering the wall too steep to climb
while the affluent boot steps on those not of their kin
To clean the grime of the needy takes more time
They think an innocent gesture amounts to a crime
They’re convinced we brought this on ourselves
and give more to themselves to stack on tall shelves
Unfortunately the wealthy control the people’s power
Our greatest empires built by the common man’s hours
Yet they are treasured the simple man’s eye
The glitz and glamour are merely an illusion, an ally.
No matter how many thick gold bricks,
I am not falling for their dubious tricks
I wish to rid our society from the shackles of the dollar
But the commas add up and debt restrains like a collar
Until we can all break free from corporate’s tight chain
They’ll stay to drain the remains from our withered veins
4. Power of Money
by Stefan
Money on my mind,
My mind is on my money,
When I have them I feel high,
And down when aren’t any.
Money can’t buy happiness,
What fool said that?
How can you be sad driving a Cadillac?
How can you be sad living in a nice house,
Having food on the table,
And not living on the street, begging for a bagel.
That’s the power of money, the power of creation,
The capital is the cornerstone of our civilization.
I love my money, they’re not the eye of the devil,
But the sweet reward that makes me grind and level.
5. Money, Greed, Power, and Death
by Anonymous
Money is the drug that everyone uses
And it’s a game everyone plays, but everyone loses
Constantly seeking something made up in our minds
It’s a waste of energy, a waste of time
Greed is the addiction that screams for more
You’ll do anything for it, like start a war
It’s worse than an addiction to heroin, meth, or crack
It makes the heart grow cold and the soul turn black
Power is the appeal that turns us on
And it’s what our whole world is based upon
A contest to see who can be the richest
To have money and cars and…oh yeah, bitches
And in the end we come to death
It’s inevitable, even amongst the best
You can have all the money, and power over all you see
But in the end you can never buy immortality
6. Power and Money
by Anonymous
They call it greed
one who goes beyond need
the word starting with P
call it power in baton with nails that yield
they call it a miser
even if it’s a loser
cause he runs after it
the word starting with M
they call it money in hand
the words
called them mean
the people running behind
just lean
but those words, evil to thoughts
who knows who brought upon?
they are called necessities to some,
it’s not about materialistic
called by nuns
money and power
makes you big
help you buy those candies and flowers
those tickets to tours and travels
how sad it is
money and power
makes you family
makes you friends
without them you are left without anyone
relationship and status bought
money and power
let you be at whims
Is it being to materialistic?
I wonder some!
The words starting with M and P
wonder will you buy happiness for me?
Final Thoughts
Money can bring us joy and comfort, but it can also bring us sorrow and insecurity.
The money poems in this article have explored the complex relationship between money and emotion.
While money can provide us with the means to buy a comfortable life, it can also add stress and strain to our lives.
Money can be a powerful force, but it is ultimately up to us to choose how we use it.
I hope these poems for money have opened up a meaningful dialogue about money and emotions. Please leave a comment and share your thoughts on money and its impact on our lives.