What did the poet say? Success is counted sweetest by those who ne’er succeed, Yet such a sentiment is wrong, deeply and distressingly so, For the nectar of success proves most enticing To those whom Dame Fortune Has coquettishly extended her index finger And, twirling it ever so slightly in the air, Has let him taste (for the briefest of moments, mind you) the tip, A momentary sensation in the merest fragment of time, But the sweetness, the utterly transcendent joy Contained in that single frame in the long movie of one’s life, Becomes not a cherished memory But an unfathomable grail which engulfs all other desire, Supplanting any semblance of prudence or reason Until its recipient is no more than a small boy Who, forsaking all other toys, hurdles bicycles and baseball bats In the absurd pursuit of a runaway kite Which has wholly bewitched him By the alluring pull of the string, The mad and joyous dance against an endless field of blue.