By Bill Coyle
Go to the prosperous city,
for I have taken pity
on its inhabitants,
who drink and feast and dance
all night in lighted halls
yet know their bacchanals
lead nowhere in the end.
Go to them, now, commend,
to those with ears to hear,
a lifestyle more austere.
Tell all my children tired
of happiness desired
and never had that there
is solace in despair.
Say there is consolation
in ruins and ruination
beneath a harvest moon
that is itself a ruin,
comfort, however cold,
in grievances recalled
beside a fire dying
from lack of love and trying.
Bill Coyle is a poet living in Somerville, Massachusetts. Click here to visit his website.
Click here for more poetry by Bill Coyle.
Reprinted with the permission of the poet.
