The environmental charity has printed up a series of poster ads to go on the tube spoofing some of the better-known poems in the English language.
Blake's 'The Tyger' is changed to read "Tyger Tyger burning bright/on Esso forecourts in the night"; while the Shakespeare sonnet 'Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day' has been altered to "Shall I compare thee to a multinational?/Thou art more arrogant and polluting".
The posters appeared on the Northern, District, Metropolitan, Hammersmith & City and Bakerloo lines.
Anita Goldsmith, a campaigner for Greenpeace, said: "These posters are the latest strand in our ongoing campaign to encourage people to stop buying petrol from Esso because of their key role in blocking international negotiations to tackle climate change, as well as fuelling Bush's war."
Unfortunately, one of the posters reading:
to buy Bush off, to pay his wages;
Thanks to them we can rely
On global warming to make us fry
arrived in Brand Republic's office on the morning it was snowing. In April.
In July last year, ExxonMobil won an injunction in its court case against Greenpeace over the use of its logo and damage to its brand by the Stop E$$o campaign.
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