"Maybe it's all about sowing my seed
But subject to conditions and not while you bleed"
"One night only"
"I believe you share my bed
You share the blame"
These lines reinforce the idea of unexpected pregnancy.
Comparing a girl crying to a pinball machine... That's a genuinely ingenious idea. Just as in these other lines:
"I follow you at a distance
Bounced through others eyes
Like a pinball machine"
The complications that the event has brought them, most likely family issues and the personal burden a child would represent to them. This scene works either literally or simply metaphorically: he nervously glances at her, aware of all the stares ricocheting from one to the other. He probably thinks everyone sees him as the sole catalyzer of the incident, engulfed in discomfort and paranoia.
It's a beautiful, creative way of describing such a common situation. Great, great song.
I'm particularly curious about what the Salvador's dream could mean... And who Mr. Walker is.
I think so, too.
"Maybe it's all about sowing my seed But subject to conditions and not while you bleed"
"One night only"
"I believe you share my bed You share the blame"
These lines reinforce the idea of unexpected pregnancy. Comparing a girl crying to a pinball machine... That's a genuinely ingenious idea. Just as in these other lines:
"I follow you at a distance Bounced through others eyes Like a pinball machine"
The complications that the event has brought them, most likely family issues and the personal burden a child would represent to them. This scene works either literally or simply metaphorically: he nervously glances at her, aware of all the stares ricocheting from one to the other. He probably thinks everyone sees him as the sole catalyzer of the incident, engulfed in discomfort and paranoia.
It's a beautiful, creative way of describing such a common situation. Great, great song. I'm particularly curious about what the Salvador's dream could mean... And who Mr. Walker is.