Here's my version of it, eternal whirlwind
Here's my version of it, eternal whirlwind
Here's my version of it, eternal whirlwind

What's the lesser of two evils?
If a suicide bomber
Made to look pregnant
Manages to kill her target, or not

What's the lesser of two evils?

What's the lesser of two evils
If she kills them
Or dies in vain?

Nature has fixed no limits on our hopes

Oh, what's the lesser of, of two evils?

What's the lesser of two evils
If the bomb was fake
Or if it was real?

Here's my version of it, eternal whirlwind
I have fostered since childhood

Well, I don't care
Love is all
I dare to drown
To be proven wrong


Lyrics submitted by mrppoet

Hope Lyrics as written by Timothy Z. Mosley Bjork Gudmundsdottir

Lyrics © Anthem Entertainment, Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd.

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Hope song meanings
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    General Comment

    This song is unbelievably understated in its execution, and yet its intensity of imagery is mind-blowing. In it, Björk discards entirely with this mentality of equivocation: "Is it worse for this person to kill this person, or that person to kill that person? Did he start it, or did she start it?" She forces her audience to address atrocity for what it truly is—a denial and a rejection of our universal and unequivocal humanity. When you deny a person's right to hope for a better future, she seems to intimate, you've left them with no choice but to try and create a world in which such hope can again exist, and you've placed yourself between the individual and their ability to conceive of a life of contentment. Violence of ideology begets physical violence, and over time, violence on all levels becomes entrenched within a culture. The only way to break this cycle is to allow for hope in a better future to take root and flourish.

    sumeragi_sluton December 29, 2007   Link

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