Fallacies in Human Infatuation
Be there a poison more vile
Than that which tastes like honey?
Be there a poison more vile
More toxic to the tongue
And yet
More pleasant to the palate?
Be there a poison more vile
Than that which tastes like honey?
To tell a tale we might have known all the while
Some could call it funny
Be there a mind more gullible
Than that of a man's blind hope?
Be there a poison more vile
More malicious in its hunt for such eagerness
And yet
More comforting to a man of such need?
Be there a mind more gullible
Than that of a man's blind hope?
To tell a tale of a man called loveable
Some could call him a dope
Be there a glass more sharp
Than the glass which holds the poison?
A poison, again, so vile
In the most jagged-edgèd glass
And yet
Neglects to lacerate the lips?
Be there a glass more sharp
Than the glass which holds the poison?
To tell a tale of a broken heart
Some could call annoying
Be there a life more crippling
Than a life dedicated?
More obsessive with every passing thought
And yet
The object of such obsession
Fails to return a compulsion to a poor man?
A man who drinks from a jagged-edgèd glass; be there one more sharp?
A man with a lover's mind; be there one more gullible?
A man who chose to drink a honey-flavored poison; be there one more vile?
A honeylike poison called lust.