Just like the way that you ran to wine
When they made the new milk turn
Jesus, a friend in the better times
Let your mother's bible burn
Freedom, a fever you suffered through
And the dog drank from your cup
Frozen, the river that baptized you
And the horse died standing up

But when a southern anthem rings
She will buckle to that sound
When that southern anthem sings
It will lay her burdens down

Just like the way that you lost your guns
When they cut the clothesline loose
Jesus, a friend of the weaker ones
Said, "I'm all they stole from you"
Freedom, a thistle that withered dry
Still a baby in your hands
Frozen, the ground refused to die
And the guitar rose again

But when that southern anthem rings
She will buckle to the sound
When that southern anthem sings
It will lay her burdens down



Lyrics submitted by slickboot, edited by michinte

Track duration: 03:54


Southern Anthem song meanings
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  • 0
    General Comment:Yeah, the "Southern Anthem" could be just about anything, but for me it's "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down".
    Flag clovuson September 21, 2011   Link
  • +2
    My Opinion:The music video can and should be watched here: youtube.com/…

    This is very clearly about the history of the South... but also about its future. The first verse deals with the Civil War and Reconstruction: "freedom a fever you suffered through" is the Emancipation Proclamation that freed the slaves. "And the dog drank from your cup" speaks to the deep feelings of powerlessness and resentment felt by the postbellum whites, especially the white gentry-they felt that everyone was walking over them: the blacks, the carpetbaggers. So the river of time they were baptized in (aka born into; most Christian denominations baptize infants) was frozen at the moment of the Civil War. The reference to Jesus and the mother's Bible are saying that Jesus allowed the mother's Bible to burn. It must be remembered that Southerners often advanced arguments from the Bible to justify slavery; this is merely saying that Jesus didn't support that interpretation and allowed their whole theological and political system (represented by the mother's Bible) burn to the ground.

    The second stanza is about the civil rights movement and the future. "Just like the way that you lost your guns/when they cut the clotheslines loose" refers to the feds under Kennedy and LBJ instituting civil rights measures. The South "lost its guns" by, once again, being forced against its will to recognize black rights. In case anyone hadn't noticed, gun rights are important in the red states, especially given that gun rights advocates worry that one day, the feds will grab everyone's guns. The song uses that concept and that mental image to convey the idea of something hideous and unpopular being foisted upon the white Southerners against their will. The "clotheslines", as mentioned above, are a reference to the lynchings. The whole verse can be interpreted to mean that the white Southerners once again felt powerless and resentful when the feds intervened to uphold black civil rights in their region.

    Also, as mentioned above, "Jesus, a friend of the weaker ones/said "I'm all they stole from you"" is basically just saying that the Southern whites denied their religious beliefs in trying to keep the blacks down. Jobs, women, whatever-they lost their Christian values. It says in the Bible "What good does it do a man to gain the whole world and yet lose his very soul?"

    "Freedom, a thistle that withered dry" was of course black civil rights. It had withered dry because it had actually once existed, during Reconstruction. The 13th and 14th Amendments gave blacks freedom for a time, until the Compromise of 1877 had the GOP abandon the blacks to Jim Crow in exchange for Southern Democrats allowing Rutherford B. Hayes to become President. Thistles, also, are annoying things-they prick you when you aren't expecting it. So was civil rights annoying to the white Southerners.

    "Frozen, the ground refused to die" is referring to several things. The ground is where the thistle was planted. The ground is also the South-the real South, the ideal South, the South of everyone that lives there, not just the whites.

    "And the guitar rose again" plays on the whole "the South will rise again" phrase but instead of a rebellion it refers to several things. The most obvious is the hippie counterculture and rock & roll, which accompanied and supported the civil rights movement. Less obvious, but still alluded to (and still yet to happen, but coming soon) it's the promise of the South rising up, not against the North, but against its own past. Guitars, the chosen musical instrument of youth, means that a new generation (with any luck, this one) will finally put an end to the division. Whites will accept blacks as fellow Southerners, blacks will accept the equality and the hatreds and fears of the past will wither away in a display of love and beauty, demonstrated in the video by the black woman and the white man making out in the grass.

    The Southern anthem in the chorus could be anything. It could be Dixie, it could be Sweet Home Alabama, it could be this song, for all that it matters. But the point of it isn't so much what the song is, but that it's Southern, and that it's an anthem. Regions don't have anthems, nations do. The South isn't quite a nation but it's more than just a region. The concept of Southern identity has traditionally been the domain of the white supremacist right, or at least perceived to be such by outsiders. A lot of the trappings of Southern identity have been considered racist: the Confederate flag controversy comes immediately to mind. The chorus is presenting hope for the future, by welcoming the blacks into a new, shared concept of Southern identity, one without hatred, segregation, guilt or fear.
    Flag Princepson April 30, 2009   Link
  • +1
    General Comment:My husband is a southern boy, and I always notice something in his eyes when this song plays. It seems to have that effect on most southern people (particularly if they now live elsewhere), and I think that's precisely the point of it.

    Here's my idea: I think this song is Sam Beams' love song to the South. He acknowledges that it has it's sins, struggles and tensions (like anywhere), but also recognizes it's tenacity, pride, and feels the people are all good in their hearts. He has faith that the southern people have the power to heal those old wounds and come together, when and if the "southern anthem rings." Because of my husband, I've spent the past three summers in rural North Carolina, and there is certainly a camaraderie between the people there. I never feel they hate me for being a "damned yankee" (they're actually very warm and asccepting), just that they know I'm different somehow. And I am- growing up down south, according to my husband, is very, very different experience from growing up in the north.

    "Just like the way that you ran to wine
    When they made the new milk turn
    Jesus, a friend in the better times,
    Let your mother's bible burn.
    Freedom, a fever you suffered through
    And the dog drank from your cup
    Frozen, the river that baptized you
    And the horse died standing up" - The constant conflicts and changes over the decades in the south (concerning religion, industry, race, way of life), have disillusioned many of it's people and created a lot of un-dealt with tension. That tension has been handed down to each generation. Some of them leave, some of them become bitter, some turn from religion or their roots, etc.

    "But when a southern anthem rings
    She will buckle to that sound
    When that southern anthem rings
    It will lay her burdens down." - The "southern anthem," the pride of the south, always speaks to it's people, and all of it's burdens will be laid down when they all can finally let those old tensions go.

    "Just like the way you lost your guns
    When they cut the clothesline loose." - this may be a comment on the scar of racial violence in the south, since clotheslines were often used as makeshift nooses.

    "Jesus, a friend of the weaker ones
    Said, "I'm all they stole from you" - I also see this as a comment on racial tension, since racist whites claimed (and still do) that blacks stole their jobs, money, women, etc. Jesus, a friend of the weaker ones, tells them that the only thing blacks ever stole from them was Jesus' favor, when the racist whites held them down and weakened them.

    "Freedom, a thistle that withered dry,
    Still a baby in your hands." -the Civil Rights Act has only been in effect since 1964, not even 50 years ago. It's still very new.

    "Frozen, the ground refused to die
    And the guitar rose again." Going back again to the tenacity, how after all of the anger, death and war the south has seen, the crops still grow and the music still plays.

    As others mentioned, the video fro this is very telling. A white man and a black women (the old tensions) wrestle each other to the ground in front of their children (the new generations), but end up lying on the ground (lay that burden down) embracing and kissing. Beautiful.
    Flag caitmaryon October 10, 2008   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:ohh and smolten grove..... why don't you take your political issues and family's emotional confusion added your clear intelectual lack of understanding and respect for other's opinions and beliefs elsewhere and just comment on the fucking song..this isn't a place to pour out your insecurities... Just a fun thought... you might wanna reflect on that.
    Flag manuelturcioson January 30, 2008   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:By The WAy...it is about the racial controversy of the south....but in a sort of resolute environment...and the woman he talks about is black
    Flag manuelturcioson January 07, 2008   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:I see so many bogus comments............nothing to to with the song.......but I guess anyone can interpret it as they like...though it would help to watch the video of this song( Directed by Sam Beam himself) it really lets you get a wider aspect of the song........it's on U2b
    Flag manuelturcioson December 26, 2007   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:I think this song is about a girl that is raised in the heart of the Bible-belt. It seems like she went to college and, under the influence of professors, others, and a "fever of freedom", lost her faith in God, the goodness of the South, and many of the things her parents taught her. There are moments, however, when she hears Dixie or thinks about home that this veneer of freedom fades and she exults in the beauty of that old faith.
    Flag jahogueon September 20, 2007   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:I was reading these posts and I hadn't become a member yet, but I read the post written by ylimemi and I had to join to tell him/her that I loved your interpretation of this song. It was amazing to read and it made me feel at home, because I have lived in the south before (Alabama) and I miss those layed back days too.

    p.s I agree with your interpretation.
    Flag omuseoon January 27, 2007   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:Something I just thought of that would probably be important to say along with my above post. If you expected me to be a crazed southern baptist zealot your way off, i'm a devout atheist and I have developed quite a dislike for the christian religion, probably mostly because it is all around me down here, its the only thing I despise about the south. Homosexuals and heretics are pretty much ostracized in some parts of the south.
    Flag Smolten Groveon January 09, 2007   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:Trivian and Ylimemi have it figured out, Ylimemi makes some very very important points about the south and our culture. The only thing I saw I didnt like was the fear of the "confederate flag" and the dislike of those "damned yankees." I was born and raised in the south, and I own several confederate flags. Someday people will come to an understanding of what that flag really is, it does not symbolize racism, it symbolizes culture, I fly it proudly. As for the "damned yankees" I do believe that phrase does sort of fit an ignorant redneck type of cliche. Although I do not dislike/hate people from the north as a whole just because they are from the north, in fact my mother was born and raised in the tri-state area and I have a very good relationship with her. There are many of them that I strongly dislike because of their rudeness, indecency and bias attitude towards the south. The attitude that we are ignorant, ugly and dirty people and that they are superior human beings to us. As we say in the south, thats "the pot calling the kettle black."

    Long live the south
    Flag Smolten Groveon January 09, 2007   Link

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