To bleed is a metaphor for giving, as in "give me more." I certainly agree it is a very sexual song and appeals to something primal, something intuitive, something carnal. Of course there's the other perspective that it's all just a metaphor for "life" in a very general sense, from birth to death and back again, with a little necrophelia thrown in for good measure. Also, I'm not certain, but I hear "I've been born with flesh and blood again..." instead of "bored," and "the deepest of love..." not "the deepest alone."
To bleed is a metaphor for giving, as in "give me more." I certainly agree it is a very sexual song and appeals to something primal, something intuitive, something carnal. Of course there's the other perspective that it's all just a metaphor for "life" in a very general sense, from birth to death and back again, with a little necrophelia thrown in for good measure. Also, I'm not certain, but I hear "I've been born with flesh and blood again..." instead of "bored," and "the deepest of love..." not "the deepest alone."