This song really grew on me, the more I listened to it. My two cents on lyrics:
"The oceans and forests could collide into one
And mar this world with a spark" ..Kinda reminds me of a disaster, be it natural or otherwise.. Think "big bang" on a grand scale
"How did the fox get the raven to crow(fox and the crow), why did the hen pick grains in the snow(The little red hen), why did the brother bury his gold(The miser and his gold), man took the rats but the kids came along(Rats of Hamelin), why did the mouse help the beast with the thorn(The lion and the mouse) These are all fables. Not all Aesop's, but "and the moral of the story is..." fables.
The way I look at this song, is the singer looking at life and watching everything happening and passing by, good and bad, knowing his actions may or may not affect the outcome, and wondering when the shoe will drop on said outcome. Everything comes to an end eventually. When will it stop? What should we do until that happens?
This song really grew on me, the more I listened to it. My two cents on lyrics:
"The oceans and forests could collide into one And mar this world with a spark" ..Kinda reminds me of a disaster, be it natural or otherwise.. Think "big bang" on a grand scale
"How did the fox get the raven to crow(fox and the crow), why did the hen pick grains in the snow(The little red hen), why did the brother bury his gold(The miser and his gold), man took the rats but the kids came along(Rats of Hamelin), why did the mouse help the beast with the thorn(The lion and the mouse) These are all fables. Not all Aesop's, but "and the moral of the story is..." fables.
The way I look at this song, is the singer looking at life and watching everything happening and passing by, good and bad, knowing his actions may or may not affect the outcome, and wondering when the shoe will drop on said outcome. Everything comes to an end eventually. When will it stop? What should we do until that happens?