About This Book
The poem presents an elderly visitor who interrupts a lavish banquet to relate his life and plead against alcohol. He recounts former prosperity ruined by the bottle and the fates of his three sons: one who succumbed to drunkenness, one lost at sea after drinking, and one who forsook the pulpit to enlist in war. Through the personal losses he argues that wine brings devastation and urges the young men to avoid its allure, offering a prayerful call to choose temperance and wholesome pledges instead.
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