| Song | Hide In the Fairytale |
| Artist | Theocracy |
| Album | As the World Bleeds |
| 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 | |
| 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 | |
| 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 | |
| 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 |
| 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 | |
| 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 | |
| Soulsickness 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 | |
| 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 soulsickness: this is the fairytale | |
| Hide in the fairytale |