"I don't think that..."
"Any means necessary for survival"
"Stick 'em up motherfucker..."
"I don't think that..."
"I don't think that the real violence has even started yet"
"Bwahahahahah"
"Stick 'em up motherfucker, this is a hold-up""

Deep inside the angle hurts
Rotation moves
The amber burns

Silently your hands are tied
Persuasion slowly slips inside
Stretching skin it has a burn
Sooner or later you will learn
Perversion

Inhibitions from within
The only thing we really want
Is sin / skin

Are you ready to believe
Are you ready to conceive

Are you ready to come
Are you ready to be one
Are you ready to come
Are you ready to be one

The leather cracks
You feel the heat
A hardening pulse
Is oh so sweet

The blindfold slips down
To your mouth
You taste the flesh
It makes no sound

The blade it skins
On your chest
Perverse illusion
Never rests
Within

"Any means necessary for survival"

Are you ready to believe
Are you ready to conceive
Are you ready to come
Are you ready to be one

This sado game
Is now for real
You suffocate
With fear of pain

The blood starts running
From your vein
The straps are tightened
For pleasured pain


Lyrics submitted by electr0n1c

The Blade Lyrics as written by Wilhelm Anton Leeb Nowell Rhys Fulber

Lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group

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The Blade song meanings
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2 Comments

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  • +1
    General Comment

    In the, begining of the song, a criminal sounding male forcefully commands the subject of the song to submit, there is obviously a rape, in which the victom in some way or another relishes, and is killed by the criminal's "blade". This is the scene dipicted by the song. The point probably has something to do with how some people are willing to go to extremes to satasfy various needs of compulsions, most usually in situations of personal hardship such as poverty. In my mind, when visualizing this song, the subject is robbed first, ("stick em up mofo, this is a holdup"). The whole "are you ready to come" might deal with a retorical acknoledgment with the fate of the song's subject, or victom...

    willerson June 23, 2010   Link

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