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ꭉꭉꭉ

Let ‘em be, let ‘em be, all-day party Fridays, long social Saturdays, and renewed hope Sundays,

Let ‘em be, let ‘em be, get us there lordy lighthoods, who flew in as howling red devils of delight!


ꭉꭉꭉ

Chorus now! Let ‘em be, let ‘em be, oh ha, let ‘em be, all the people, all their plight, let ‘em be!

Bring ‘em forth a cauldron brewing, in their ever glowing aclum, oh lordy lighthood, let ‘em be!


ꭉꭉꭉ

It once was just a day off, in service to the great god, oh lordy lighthood, let ‘em be, let ‘em be,

Then a deal gave a weekend, to rest before gods serving, oh yes, let the workers be, let ‘em be!


ꭉꭉꭉ

And now within a churning, let ‘em be, let ‘em be, everyday folk are yearning for a renewing deal,

A three day weekend sounds divine, to sooth my sore modern mind, oh lordy lighthood, let it be!


ꭉꭉꭉ

Chorus again! Let ‘em be, let ‘em be, oh ha, let ‘em be, all the people, all their plight, let ‘em be!

Bring ‘em forth a cauldron brewing, in their ever glowing aclum, oh lordy lighthood, let ‘em be!



I’d heard a dark and uncomfortable joke means you're getting through the pain of loss.


Mixed results really...


Cats like boxes cause they get to feel themselves in a different space for a time,

Then hop out joyously back to reality, showing that a box’s walls are escapable.

 

Though, this assumes no one poisoned the cat while it was finding itself in the box.


But, what are the chances that an experimentalist outside wanted that cat to die?

And how much did that boxed cat want to escape a poisonous situation and live?


Substructure plays by music, so was the trapped cat in tune or the cruel scientist?


I really just don't know,

Does external distance matter, if both are entangled for their own desired outcome?


Yet, the cat was never alone,

Cause what sort of experiment would it be, without an observer to later check the box?




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