My Despair
Storm of Despair: Unveiling the Dark Symphony of JudgmentLyrics
Far away from nothing
Expressing a feeling of being far from emptiness or insignificance.
Dark sky is what I see
Observing a dark sky.
I hear the wind it´s coming
Auditory perception of the approaching wind.
Steering up the trees
The wind stirring the trees.
At first it was a whisper
Initially, a subtle communication, perhaps a secret, conveyed softly.
A secret of the leaves
A clandestine revelation associated with leaves.
Then bitter rain like dream of pain
The transition to a bitter rain resembling a painful dream.
Was falling of the streets
Rain falling from the streets, embodying the dream's anguish.
This is the rage of heaven
Describing a furious celestial force, possibly a metaphorical response to prayer.
The answer of my prayer
Indicating that the storm is the answer to a prayer.
The storm will sing my song tonight
The storm becoming a singer of the narrator's song, reflecting despair.
The song of my despair
The song sung by the storm symbolizes the narrator's despair.
I hear the howling creatures
Perceiving howling creatures and sensing passion in the air.
Smell passion in the air
The storm continuing to sing the narrator's song of despair.
The storm will sing my song tonight
Reiteration that the storm is singing the song of despair.
The song of my despair
Repeating the theme that the storm is the embodiment of the narrator's despair.
As windows start to shatter
Windows breaking, possibly symbolizing the shattering of stability.
I kiss the breaking pane
Kissing the breaking pane, suggesting an embrace of the impending chaos.
There´s no cover, little lover
No protection for the narrator's little lover from the elements.
From thunder, wind and rain
Thunder, wind, and rain as formidable and unstoppable forces.
This is your judgement day
Declaring a judgment day, a moment of reckoning.
The day to say farewell
A day to bid farewell, implying a significant and final departure.
Sinners pray its time to pay
Associating sinners with prayers and the inevitable payment of their dues.
And most will burn in hell
Suggesting that most will face consequences, potentially a grim fate.
Comment