I have no idea if this is on the right track or not, but here's what I think:
I see him talking to a girl who's been sort of trapped in her overbearing parents' world. In the first verse, he talks to the parents, telling him how he likes/loves their daughter and he's not going to stop. They've been through this before though. In the second verse, he asks her to come with him and get away from the "hate and hurt and misery." In the chorus, he is speaking again to the parents and tells them to "let her hear the werewolves if she wants to." Let her go out in the world if that's what she wants.
I have no idea if this is on the right track or not, but here's what I think:
I see him talking to a girl who's been sort of trapped in her overbearing parents' world. In the first verse, he talks to the parents, telling him how he likes/loves their daughter and he's not going to stop. They've been through this before though. In the second verse, he asks her to come with him and get away from the "hate and hurt and misery." In the chorus, he is speaking again to the parents and tells them to "let her hear the werewolves if she wants to." Let her go out in the world if that's what she wants.