Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song Burial at Sea, artist - Mono. Album song Hymn To The Immortal Wind, in the genre Пост-рок
Date of issue: 23.03.2009
Record label: Союз Мьюзик
Song language: English
Burial at Sea |
He watched the heavy sea stretch to the edge of the earth without fail. |
Its ever-present body was frightening, yet its freedom beautiful. |
Above the horizon, nothing remained but a moon and sky stained by smoke. |
Beneath it, abandoned ships rocked back and forth, half sunken and eaten by |
decay. |
For endless miles of empty waters, waves swayed in unison as if they |
were mourning. |
The earth knew and the boy did, too |
It was the beginning of a merciless winter and the end was nowhere in sight. |
A young boy, having lost track of time, hurried through the woods towards an |
empty patch by the river. |
With every step he grew uneasy as he could not see |
her small figure waiting there. |
Out of breath, he dropped to his knees and |
prayed in fear |
The sky had cast a dreary blanket upon the earth, draping over every last |
creature. |
A stench of smoke clouds and distant eruptions confined people in |
their homes. |
Their world was now a ghost town where the sound of children’s |
laughter was drowned by hunger cries. |
Even the village dogs had gone mad and |
roamed the streets aimlessly. |
What was once a simple life was now a battle to |
survive each passing day. |
Perhaps, the earth was preparing to cleanse, |
for it was the end of time, a rebirth of time |
A pair of small hands covered his eyes and he turned to find a young girl with |
soot streaked across her face. |
He embraced her closely as his panic melted, |
and unable to let go for a single moment they warmed each other until night |
fell. |
They inhaled the air around them, ripe with the scent of burnt pine and |
evening frost, a familiar smell of the place they once called home. |
Their families had perished, and all that was left for them was a will to stay |
together. |
Day by day, they watched themselves surrender to the inevitable fate |
of the earth |
There it stood in the back of a deserted shed. |
The boy had found it leaning in |
a pot as if it was waiting for him, young, green, and alive. |
That morning he |
had awoken with a mission. |
It was time to offer a gift to their woods, |
something that could grow, something that would survive. |
Upon searching a row |
of farms, he had caught a glimpse of the young tree left alone to wither. |
The edges of the leaves had faded into brown, the dirt was dry, |
but it was alive nonetheless |
Pleased with himself, he could not help but laugh aloud while carrying his new |
treasure. |
But as he ran to meet her, he heard heavier footsteps trailing behind |
him. |
Before he could glance, a heavy figure thrust him to the ground, |
sending the tree flying ahead. |
Having seen him rummage through his shed, |
a man began to kick the boy as if he was nothing but a stump in the ground. |
The boy heard himself cry out, but as his own voice faded away, |
he could only hear the sound of his flesh against the man’s fists and feet. |
For a moment, he ignored the man’s brute strength and watched him stare |
straight ahead blankly. |
They look in his eyes was emptier than the village they |
stood in |
Alone at last after what seemed like hours, the boy awoke in agony. |
But surrounded by pieces of the shattered pot, the tree remained unharmed, |
now with its healthy roots bare. |
Strengthened by the sight of it, |
he ignored the pain in his body and stood up |
When the girl saw him limping towards her in the woods, she took him into her |
arms and cleaned him with her torn white clothes without questioning what had |
happened. |
Cupping his face, she wept for him as he tried to hide his wounds in |
shame. |
They sat in silence together, listening to the wind passing overhead and |
imaging its destination to be a better place that where they remained |
He brought forth the tree and placed it between. |
Her pale face appeared fragile, |
yet hopeful somehow. |
It had not changed in the years he had known her. |
When his eyes closed, she still appeared before him |
«This tree is stronger than us now. |
When we are no longer on this earth, |
it will continue to grow |
We can leave our memory with this tree,» he spoke |
«Someday, the earth will be beautiful again?» |
she asked, arranging a dry leaf |
into his hair |
«Yes. |
We will find each other here then,» he said |
That evening they planted the tree into the earth and entrusted it with a part |
of their memory and vow. |
They collected white stones from the river and placed |
a visible ring in the ground around the tree, leaving room for the trunk to |
grow. |
Together they said a prayer to the sky, asking for the tree to survive |
the cruel winter and he guarded safely until they could return someday |
As they prayed on their knees, snow fell like tears onto the ground-the first |
snow of winter |
Two frail bodies teetered along the highest cliff by the sea that night. |
Three steps from the edge, she wondered what waited on the other side of the |
black waters. |
Two steps away, he studied her face, vowing to remember. |
On their last step, their eyes locked, a silent reminder of their promise. |
Leaving behind any fears, hand in hand they jumped, a leap of faith into the |
cold unwelcome waves below |