For me, it's a conversation between two soldiers - and one of them is about to die.
Let's call them A and B, B being the one who's dying.
B is extremely religious. He believes in God and just feels that he's right. A is an
ordinary soldier, a friend, but he doesn't believe or love God. For A, God makes no
difference or doesn't even exist.
B is deeply wounded and about to die. Probably, he sacrificed himself, in order to
save A. A is calling him "crazy" and doesn't understand his sacrifice. So, with that
in mind, let's talk about the lyrics:
"Don't I know it? Nobody has to say"
A is probably calling B stupid for being such a nice person, because he sacrificed
himself for someone else. And B answers, telling A that he knows that, but he's ok
just like that.
"I've been lucky.
Guess I was born that way"
B tells A something about him. For such a gentle soul, he could get that far in the
war. So he's been lucky, he could be one of the first deads.
"I thank my father,
His absence has made me strong"
B doesn't know his father, or at least he was left with his mother when he was a
child. I don't think his father is actually dead, it sounds to me like they were
abandoned.
"And I love my mother
But she had troubles with God"
He loves his mother, she raised him, but she didn't believe in God. Or were angry with
God. Or she thought it could be a waste of time believing in such a thing.
"For the life that you've led
You've had angels in your head
Did you hear them singing in the end"
A still cannot believe that B is dying. He was a nice and pure soul. A is angry
because he couldn't do a thing to save his friend, B. So he says that B was so
positive and what the fuck he thought at that moment? He believed in angels, so A
asked angrily if B heard them singing in the end/air?.
"All the things that you've seen
All the things that could have been"
This is still A telling B that he could've been so much, he deserved a better life
than that.
"Well I've been everything I want to be
So no tears, no tears for me"
B tells A that he had been everything he wanted to be. B had no regrets, he made that
for loving his comrades.
"Yeah, I've bathed in sunshine
But cherished the fading light
And I heard my heartbeat faulter
On a winter's night
I loved a woman
She didn't hear my prayers
So Lord, oh Lord, I'm yours"
B tells A some of his memories (people says that when we're about to die, we can see
our life right before our eyes) and tells that he loved deeply a woman, but she didn't
believed in God neither, or didn't respect his beliefs. So he has no regrets, he's
asking God to take him away, finally.
"Because someone somewhere's going home tonight
Try to understand the sacrifice
So save your tears for those left behind"
At this point, A's crying. B asks him to not cry, because there's someone, somewhere
(maybe his mother or a relative) who can't understand why B sacrificed himself for the
others. So B's asks A to save all his tears for those who lived (the other soldiers
and their relatives), because B was kinda happy, he would finally reach God. Maybe,
For me, it's a conversation between two soldiers - and one of them is about to die. Let's call them A and B, B being the one who's dying.
B is extremely religious. He believes in God and just feels that he's right. A is an
ordinary soldier, a friend, but he doesn't believe or love God. For A, God makes no
difference or doesn't even exist.
B is deeply wounded and about to die. Probably, he sacrificed himself, in order to
save A. A is calling him "crazy" and doesn't understand his sacrifice. So, with that
in mind, let's talk about the lyrics:
"Don't I know it? Nobody has to say"
A is probably calling B stupid for being such a nice person, because he sacrificed
himself for someone else. And B answers, telling A that he knows that, but he's ok
just like that.
"I've been lucky. Guess I was born that way"
B tells A something about him. For such a gentle soul, he could get that far in the
war. So he's been lucky, he could be one of the first deads.
"I thank my father, His absence has made me strong"
B doesn't know his father, or at least he was left with his mother when he was a
child. I don't think his father is actually dead, it sounds to me like they were
abandoned.
"And I love my mother But she had troubles with God"
He loves his mother, she raised him, but she didn't believe in God. Or were angry with
God. Or she thought it could be a waste of time believing in such a thing.
"For the life that you've led You've had angels in your head Did you hear them singing in the end"
A still cannot believe that B is dying. He was a nice and pure soul. A is angry
because he couldn't do a thing to save his friend, B. So he says that B was so
positive and what the fuck he thought at that moment? He believed in angels, so A
asked angrily if B heard them singing in the end/air?.
"All the things that you've seen All the things that could have been"
This is still A telling B that he could've been so much, he deserved a better life
than that.
"Well I've been everything I want to be So no tears, no tears for me"
B tells A that he had been everything he wanted to be. B had no regrets, he made that
for loving his comrades.
"Yeah, I've bathed in sunshine But cherished the fading light And I heard my heartbeat faulter On a winter's night I loved a woman She didn't hear my prayers So Lord, oh Lord, I'm yours"
B tells A some of his memories (people says that when we're about to die, we can see
our life right before our eyes) and tells that he loved deeply a woman, but she didn't
believed in God neither, or didn't respect his beliefs. So he has no regrets, he's
asking God to take him away, finally.
"Because someone somewhere's going home tonight Try to understand the sacrifice So save your tears for those left behind"
At this point, A's crying. B asks him to not cry, because there's someone, somewhere
(maybe his mother or a relative) who can't understand why B sacrificed himself for the
others. So B's asks A to save all his tears for those who lived (the other soldiers
and their relatives), because B was kinda happy, he would finally reach God. Maybe,
for the first time, B was entirely happy.