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Isn't it ironic, lovely ones, How so many pretty faces Can hide a demon's soul? How the same eyes which bat their lashes In flirty beckoning, Offer a window into wickedness, An entrance to an evil place, That harbors evil things.... How the same lips which speak such pretty words, And lovely falsities, In pleasant company Drip poison behind the safety of closed doors, Without the courage to speak so In the outer realm... How the same mind which seems so wise Can foster such horrid operations, An assembly line of treachery Which twists and warps that Which really is Into what is isn't, For its own selfish, devilish purposes... Isn't it odd how the world's Cruel jokes Have remained so timeless, Doomed, like history, To be repeated, Over and over again? "Do not judge a book by its cover," they say. And isn't it funny how this phrase Aims to promise some unknown good Behind that cover, But never entertains the possibility Of evil behind it, Instead? Yet it still holds true. It is far more dangerous To trust a pretty face not supported By pretty words and actions, To have faith in a glittery exterior Without pondering the worms Which breed underneath, Than it is to doubt A far less attractive cover, Beaten, threadbare, its title worn off By the winds of the world, May guard a mine of diamonds within. How foolish of us all To take at face value That which we see, hear, and touch. How irresponsible To abandon the idea and support of proof, And let our judgment laze around, About as useful as if it we hadn't had it at all. I find it hard to pity those moths Which do not examine the light Before letting themselves fly into it. When the static crackles, And the glimmer flickers, And the wings are burnt and injured, It is too late for a second thought, then. And as a bystander, I cannot reach out and pull them from it. I can call out my warnings, My cautionary tales, And even my proof that the light, In all its beauty, Harbors a special kind of evil That they clearly cannot see, But I must let them learn. As much as it hurts. I truly believe that what we put out Into the world Will come back to us. Perhaps not today, Or tomorrow, Or anywhere In the forseeable future ahead. But it will return. And though my human nature Demands I bring order to the wicked, Expose their evils for the world To shudder at, And cower away from, It is not my job. These forces which surround us Bear that burden. I, a small and staggering presence Among billions, Can only perform what I know it right, And good, And kind, And hope that my fellow man, Instead of drooling at the sight Of fool's gold, Will find a true beauty in this instead, And choose to abandon all that deceives. On a day which has no date, No time, No existence until it is ready, Justice will come to the evil ones, And those foolish enough to follow them. How gloriously the wicked will fall, Their cries ringing in ears Which heard their sneers and cruel remarks, Underhanded jabs and petty, Childish words, So many times. Ears which will hear the music Of that which was sown, Being reaped In the rays of a glorious sun. Those untrained minds, Which sought the disappointments Of easy friendships And sparkling facades, Will fall, as well, Regretting their decision to Believe in the unreal, And abandon their sense. And I, at the end of it all, May stand with fewer than I started with. But, with those solid few, Apart from the unstable masses, I will still stand stronger And better than I was, And with minds like mine, Rooted in goodness, kindness, And grateful for the difficult journey Which brought forth the lesson that Examining a person's cover Is well worth discovering what lies beneath. Beware.
0
Dec 16, 2013
Dec 16, 2013 at 12:32 AM UTC
The Wicked
Isn't it ironic, lovely ones, How so many pretty faces Can hide a demon's soul? How the same eyes which bat their lashes In flirty beckoning, Offer a window into wickedness, An entrance to an evil place, That harbors evil things.... How the same lips which speak such pretty words, And lovely falsities, In pleasant company Drip poison behind the safety of closed doors, Without the courage to speak so In the outer realm... How the same mind which seems so wise Can foster such horrid operations, An assembly line of treachery Which twists and warps that Which really is Into what is isn't, For its own selfish, devilish purposes... Isn't it odd how the world's Cruel jokes Have remained so timeless, Doomed, like history, To be repeated, Over and over again? "Do not judge a book by its cover," they say. And isn't it funny how this phrase Aims to promise some unknown good Behind that cover, But never entertains the possibility Of evil behind it, Instead? Yet it still holds true. It is far more dangerous To trust a pretty face not supported By pretty words and actions, To have faith in a glittery exterior Without pondering the worms Which breed underneath, Than it is to doubt A far less attractive cover, Beaten, threadbare, its title worn off By the winds of the world, May guard a mine of diamonds within. How foolish of us all To take at face value That which we see, hear, and touch. How irresponsible To abandon the idea and support of proof, And let our judgment laze around, About as useful as if it we hadn't had it at all. I find it hard to pity those moths Which do not examine the light Before letting themselves fly into it. When the static crackles, And the glimmer flickers, And the wings are burnt and injured, It is too late for a second thought, then. And as a bystander, I cannot reach out and pull them from it. I can call out my warnings, My cautionary tales, And even my proof that the light, In all its beauty, Harbors a special kind of evil That they clearly cannot see, But I must let them learn. As much as it hurts. I truly believe that what we put out Into the world Will come back to us. Perhaps not today, Or tomorrow, Or anywhere In the forseeable future ahead. But it will return. And though my human nature Demands I bring order to the wicked, Expose their evils for the world To shudder at, And cower away from, It is not my job. These forces which surround us Bear that burden. I, a small and staggering presence Among billions, Can only perform what I know it right, And good, And kind, And hope that my fellow man, Instead of drooling at the sight Of fool's gold, Will find a true beauty in this instead, And choose to abandon all that deceives. On a day which has no date, No time, No existence until it is ready, Justice will come to the evil ones, And those foolish enough to follow them. How gloriously the wicked will fall, Their cries ringing in ears Which heard their sneers and cruel remarks, Underhanded jabs and petty, Childish words, So many times. Ears which will hear the music Of that which was sown, Being reaped In the rays of a glorious sun. Those untrained minds, Which sought the disappointments Of easy friendships And sparkling facades, Will fall, as well, Regretting their decision to Believe in the unreal, And abandon their sense. And I, at the end of it all, May stand with fewer than I started with. But, with those solid few, Apart from the unstable masses, I will still stand stronger And better than I was, And with minds like mine, Rooted in goodness, kindness, And grateful for the difficult journey Which brought forth the lesson that Examining a person's cover Is well worth discovering what lies beneath. Beware.
faith-alexis
Written by
27/F/American
Dec 16, 2013
Dec 16, 2013 at 12:32 AM UTC
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