Tags
Ancient Wisdom, Blind Ambition, Civilization’s Cost, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Ecological Critique, Enduring Memory, False Progress, Hidden Consequence, Hubris of Man, Human Folly, Timeless Observation

In city lights and boardroom dreams,
We weigh our worth in cold, hard schemes—
Tall towers rise on bone and debt,
A pound of flesh is what they net.
How strange to price our souls in gold,
Ignoring warmth as hands grow cold.
Why do we ruin what we sow,
And salt the earth where wildflowers grow?
Are we in fear of losing our place,
That we trade meaning for the frantic race?
We chase dollars and worship renown,
While razing the world to which we’re bound.
Is it darkness, hubris, jest,
That leads us to desert what’s best?
To treasure scars and mask our frowns,
Wearing lost time like thorny crowns?
Value parades in hollow pretense,
Forever judged by consequence.
We pawn tomorrow for delight,
Mortgage the stars to own the night.
Each fleeting wish, each hunger fed,
Consumes the earth on which we tread.
To gild our lives with borrowed worth,
We spend the future of the Earth.

