Friday, April 17, 2026

MONEY LENDERS

 

                         

Jesus driving out money changers and sellers of sacrificial birds

                             

Shakespeare's "New Place"
   

                             

Traders' Guild in Elizabethan age

                                  
     Banking Services

                 

                    

 1                 Lord Jesus expelled he moneychangers from the court

Of temples for misusing the place as Matthew wrote;

The wandering Jews wherever they went tried in vain

For livelihood but none understood their strife and pain;

The Christian stated did not confer any right

To own or do any work; none understood their plight;

For livelihood, they turned as money lenders at last

The forbidden profession as per the Biblical thought;

As marginalized group in Renaissance plays

They were portrayed as greedy villains with disgrace;

The Bard of Avon showed some humanistic strain

Showed the Jews as men who feel pleasure and pain;

Though he wrote against lending money on usury

His precept he himself did not obey;

The great bard himself earned much in his days

By lending and collecting tithes in rigid ways;

His spouse, though not well-learned did play

A vital role in lending money to others as well

So many writers in clearing their debts did fail

Destitute, at last ended up in jail;

As the bard of Cumberland rightly said

“Mighty poets in their misery dead.”

 Famed as the “master of mighty line” in his life

Charged with heresy, died in a drunken strife;

  

                       Part -II

In former times, the merchant guilds used to lend

Enough wealth to kings and feudal lords to spend

On their lavish luxuries and to fulfill the needs

Of their people to improve progress with speed;

The guilds besides expanding their trade

Overseas, a vital role, they had played;

They improved their status by their prominent part

In patronizing schools, churches and arts;

A basic concept of banking system they did start

Which helped rulers and other traders a lot;


                       Part--III

Lending and borrowing is a sin no more             

In present times a chance to develop and score

Success in expanding their status and prospects;

A banker is now treated with utmost respect;

Even states brag about rising huge loans as a sign

Of progress and welfare schemes as they define;

Yet providing too many things free leads to decline

Of states in finances and economic strain;

A balanced approach between welfare and progress

Saves people from facing tax-increase and distress;

But be not too tight-fisted and stingy with greed;

Enjoy your life and spend on you can afford and need;

Help others within your limits and spare

Some wealth for the suffering poor; we should care

Even for the welfare of the birds and beasts

Our co-brethren, with kindness we should treat;

Discrete and wise use of wealth a must for all

For the constructive goals and welfare for all;

We keep our wealth in banks to safe guard and secure

Some interest; banks in turn, on our behalf, lend

Our wealth to persons and industries to spend

And collect some amount as interest in return;

For whatever amount in banks, we invest

A part from their gains, they pay us as interest;

We can also borrow money from banks and use

On purchase of house or vehicle we choose;

Or on weddings or children’s studies; but beware

Of using loans taken; spend wisely and take care;

Banks with prompt services serve us a lot

With humanistic touch they play their part

To help farmers, merchants, women and students

But money borrowed should be wisely spent;

Misuse of loans explodes like a bomb in your face

Lands you in soup and brings shame and disgrace;

Money flows like honey in a sieve or down the drain

If you, wasteful expenses cannot restrain;

All of us are lenders and borrowers in one sense

But we should use in proper way our finances.

                     ******************** 

Note: 

1       Matthew wrote – Jesus drove out the money changers who charged exorbitant rates to exchange foreign currency and vendors who sold doves as for sacrifices in the temple courts (Open courtyard surrounding the synagogue) in Jerusalem.  He declared the temple as a “House of prayer and accused them of turning it into a “den of thieves.” (Matthew 12:12-13).

       2      Shakespeare in his play “The Merchant of Venice” (1596-1597, published in 1600 A.D.) portrayed Shylock, the Jewish moneylender as a very greedy inhuman person demanding his pound of flesh from Antonio. Still, he tried to show the human side of the Jew when he writes “Hath not a Jew eyes? Hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions; fed with the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same diseases, healed by the means, warmed by the same winter and summer as a Christian is?” (The Merchant of Venice, Act III scene 1)

2       Chrostopher Marlowe in His play “The Jew of Malta” (1589-1590) featured Barabas as a greedy merchant who used violence and manipulation to take revenge on Christian and Muslim authorities and ultimately fell a victim to his own evil designs.

3      “Neither a lender nor a borrower be – (Act I, Scene 3) In Shakespeare’s tragedy “Hamlet” (1599-1601), Polonius spoke the above advice to his son Laertes.

 

4       In real life, Shakespeare was a shrewd businessman who gave loans, invested in real estate business, and bought tithes (agricultural taxes from the parishes of old Stratford) and by this act ,he not only derived profit but also as a lay rector and a major property holder in the town, got the prestigious right of having burial spot in the chancel of the Holy Trinity Church for his whole family. He bought 107 acres of land and purchased the second largest house in Stratford-upon- Avon known as New Place in 1597 from William Underhill. It was a large brick-and-timber mansion with ten fireplaces and over twenty rooms. Shakespeare stayed here with his family members from 1597 to 1616.

 

5       Anne Hathaway, Shakespeare’s wife was a shrewd manager of her family’s finances. She ran a malt-making business, managed property and gave money on loan.

 

6      Mighty poets in their misery dead” – a famous line from William Wordworth’s poem “Resolution and Independence. "He refers to the troubled lives of Chatterton and Robert Burns who led a life of poverty and made heavy debts. Many Elizabethan poets and writers like Ben Jonson, Robert Greene, George Chapman and Thomas Dekker went to prison as they were unable to clear their heavy debts.

 

7      "Master of the mighty line" refers to Chrostopher Marlowe (1564-93) who used blank verse in a creative manner in dramas charged with emotional force, flexibility and graceful rhythm. But he was charged with heresy as an atheist, and was killed in a drunken duel in Deptford tavern at the age of twenty-nine.

 

8       Trade Guilds: Merchant Associations of various crafts played a prominent role in regulating trade, product quality and expansion of their trade overseas. They acted as financial intermediaries providing loans to kings and feudal lords and town governments to finance wars. They secured royal influence which increased their social status and got exemption from certain taxes. They served as banks to help the local governments. They also provided aid to churches, schools, hospitals and philanthropic organizations. They organized, funded and staged drams like mystery plays. 

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17th April 2026                  Somaseshu Gutala 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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