Terence: We wrote one last night outside the mini mart. Morris called it
"Stuart Drives A Comfortable Car" and then like in country songs, you know,
in parentheses it says "There's Usually Someone in the Trunk." And, and um, I came up with a tune just a hummin'.

Doyle: See, you don't want to question the genius, Vaughan. Morris here is
a modern-day poet, kinda like in olden times.

Morris: Yeah, I got a new tune in composition entitled "The Thrill." And it
goes somethin' like this: "I stand on the hill, not for a thrill, but for
the breath of a fresh kill. Never mind the man who contemplates doin' away
with license plates. He stands alone, anyhow, bakin' the cookies of
discontent by the heat of the laundromat vent. Leavin' his soul!" Then like
in poetry I go dot-dot-dot, you know, kinda off center, then I drop down
and then I go: "Leavin' his soul! And partin' the waters of the medulla
oblongata of - -brrrrrr! - -mankind!" That was a damn good song, wasn't it
Doyle?