A human habit universal, our measure of success by possessions to envy. An infernal curse—commercial purveyors, trinkets of gold and gem, shining blinking, fabrics glistening; the value of thing manipulated by them insect kings.
By lion's fang and butterfly guise they rule, a hubris deceiver upon their shoulder obscuring their likeness to those serfs upon whom they cunningly demand servitude, otherwise be starved, put out, forced to watch their future falter—sons and daughters failing in flight, their wings clipped prior first spanning.
Locust clans spurred to fight over resources, who sell and buy back nature's bounty once formed anew into advertisement's subject. Oceans emptied of fish, forests becoming myth, uplands turned to wastelands, abomination fog a spherical prison choking earth's inhabitants—the marketer's dowry paid for marriage to a precarious economy. Royalty made rich at cost of labouring spine, but worse— our home and thereby our hope we consign.
By their futile attempt to survive, the locust instinct to consume, until all is gone we contrive, the inevitable a meet with our doom—kings with stained glass wings to follow soon. So small are we amidst this vast existence; the ambitions of men barely bigger than an insect's significance.