A child in sweet duplicity
 For innocence? Or slavery to nature
 And the bents that haunt him straight out of the womb?
 He doesn’t have to learn the things unseemly that his instinct brings
 To carry like a burden from the cradle to the tomb
 You’ll never have to teach him how to lie
 If we are born in innocence, well, don’t you wonder why?
 For selfishness already dwells inside
 The birthright of Adam, the curse of the old man
 
Day and night
 Jekyll and Hyde in the fairytale
 This is much more frightening
 Darkness and light
 Feed the new man and tear the veil
 See the old man dying
 
Behold the loving family man
 Who tries to do the best he can
 And loves his wife and children even more than his own life
 But just like that, a wandering eye leads to a suffocating lie
 And selfishness and deep betrayal cuts them like a knife
 If mankind doesn’t have a sinful drive
 Then tell me why he’d wreck his life to get some on the side?
 The warring of two natures deep inside
 Starving the new keeps the old man alive
 
Soul-sickness nailed to a cross
 
Day and night
 Jekyll and Hyde in the fairytale
 This is much more frightening
 Darkness and light
 Feed the new man and tear the veil
 See the old man dying
 
Humankind in innocence, a lie so thinly veiled
 Man born without soul-sickness: this is the fairytale
 Hide in the fairytale