Oh qualia, you cover my eyes, And hold me chained to my lies. Subject as it stands, the world Is in my head, I’d wish the solips sold away their rights.
Fine as she was I met her one day, A pretty lass of such inky hair. She turned me down, as it stood, And so I began The walk of a thousand woods.
For every man that stood, Sat in his head the world Veiled in black.
No such thing you’d think! But quiet are the felled trees Of woods never seen.
But hear me now when I say, His pen is key to my malady. For a scribe he is Of the veil that he sees.
When you read those marks Of this pen, You see what he sees, Reduced to his truth, The many casts of die strewn Of hands from up above.
‘Simple are your words that are true’, you say, And ask of piqued voice, ‘What reason be for your melancholy?’
Ah! How my woe does hide In qualia’s great bright light!
I wish that the solips were right, That in my head alone stood the world. But no! but no!
In my head stands a world of broken truth.
That I would not rise to smell her hair As the morning light struck right, Is my tragedy. Oh! Another man’s delight!
And not a thousand of his words For qualia, Could have fed my life’s zest.