The subject of this poem is unknown. Metre: elegiac couplets.
Ad Iacobum regem, de corrupto quodam Senatore (n.d.)
Ad Iacobum regem, de corrupto quodam Senatore
Cur dicit jus fur? Leges cur tractat avarus?
Si vis te justum rex Iacobe vocem:
crede mihi, non vera magis sunt Delphica dicta:
'quisquis amat nummos, negligit ille νόμους.'
To King James, on a certain corrupt senator
Why does a thief speak of justice? Why does a greedy man practice the laws? If you wish, King James, I shall tell you something right: believe me, there are none truer than the words of the Oracle: a 'whoever loves money, spurns the laws.'
Notes:
Translation
a: The priestess at the Temple of Apollo at Delphi, located on the slopes of Mount Parnassus.