Oh girl I don't know all the reasons why
I found the answer lookin' in your eye
I go out walking all day long
Take away this lonely man soon he will be gone

Cause I'll tell you everything about being free
Yes I can see you girl can you see me

You don't need to know what I do all day
It's as much as I know watch it waste away

Cause I'll tell you everything about being free
Yes I can see you girl can you see me

Go and see the sorcerer look into a ball
You may find the answer written on the wall

The left one was a dancer can you see the answer, oh

Put her in a mansion on top of the hill
Please don't make her do things against her will
I found something special I don't know why
Looking into her pretty little eye

Cause I'll tell you everything about being free


Lyrics submitted by mattalac, edited by 311fan46

Vagabond Lyrics as written by Christopher James Ross Andrew James Stockdale

Lyrics © BMG Rights Management, Universal Music Publishing Group, Downtown Music Publishing, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.

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Vagabond song meanings
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    General Comment

    Just my take:

    To me, this is a song about a guy who is certain he wants an uncertain girl. Its the classic little romantic story of he-knows-she-doesn't. The girl is unsure about her feelings for him, but he found his own answer just by "looking in her eye" and is confident he's right (take away this lonely man soon he will be gone). He is lonely, after all, as he says "I'll tell you everything about living free." He's telling her he knows what its like to be single and free, and he doesn't want that life anymore, he wants her, and is compromising his pride for her, beckoning her really (yes I can see you girl can you see me?) Also, the whole thing about going to see the sorcerer look into the ball, you may find the answer written on the wall indicates she's making something very simple more complicated, or perhaps waiting to hear something she already knows. The sorcerer and the wall... I can relate that to personal scenarios so incredibly well to a tee almost, but that's irrelevant. Unfortunately, all this bubbly happiness is from the perspective of the guy. The end of the story is hazy and even a bit eerie, with that long bit of an instrumental at the end. That combined with the "innocence lost" in the beginning tells me, at least, that this is a song about a one-sided relationship, one that the guy is tragically more involved in than the girl. That, of course, makes it a perfect song for 500 Days of Summer.

    HammerFloydon December 28, 2012   Link

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