You know what the stories say About me. They call me silly, Foolish, disobedient. They say I should have listened to my Father. Now he was a guy Worth listening to: the one Who built the labyrinth -- the one That caged the bull-headed beast And sent virgins, hopelessly Lost, to their deaths.
He made me a pair of wings And when he was finished told me to contemplate my mortality. And not to fly too close To the sun. For the feathers Were joined only by wax and days But the sun was made of molten fire and eternity.
How could I listen though? When after so long Penned in the cool, dim labyrinthine Depths of his workshop, I was finally Free. A soft warm shaft of sunlight pierced me through and I was lost. On my ****** flight, I was ecstatically lost, rising madly to the shivering brink of infinity.
Imagine me with my great white waxen feathered wings circling (Circling) (Circling) spiraling Higher and higher to a crisis.
Oh I melted. Then I fell.
I do wish they'd asked me how I'd have Liked to be remembered though: Not the merely foolish bull-headed kid who refused to obey, But the dreamer with wild eyes, The one who once flew too close to the Sun And briefly, (All too briefly) Blazed.