Princess cards she sends me with her regards,
Oh, bar-room eyes shine vacancy
To see her you gotta look hard
Wounded deep in battle, I stand stuffed like some soldier undaunted
To her cheshire smile I'll stand on file
She's all I ever wanted
You let your blue walls stand in the way of these facts, honey
Get your carpet baggers off my back
Girl give me time to cover my tracks
You said, "Here's your mirror and your ball and jacks"
But they're not what I came for
Oh I came for so much more
And I know you that too
And I know you know that's true

I came for you
I came for you
I came for you
For you
I came for you

Crawl into my ambulance
Your pulse is getting weak
Reveal yourself all to me now
While you've got the strength to speak
'Cause they're waiting for you at Bellevue
With their oxygen masks
But I could give it all to you now
If only you could ask
Don't call for your surgeon
Even he says it's late
It's not your lungs this time
But your heart holds your fate
Don't give me my money back
Don't want it anymore
It's not that nursery mouth I came back for
It's not the way you're stretched out on the floor
I've broken all your windows
And I've rammed through all your doors
Who am I to ask you to fight my wars
And you should know that's true
You should know that too

I came for you
I came for you
I came for you
For you
I came for you

Don't call for your surgeon
Even he says it's late
It's not your lungs this time
But your heart holds your fate
Don't give me my money back
Don't want it anymore
It's not that nursery mouth I came back for
It's not the way you're stretched out on the floor
I've broken all your windows
And I've rammed through all your doors
Who am I to ask you to fight my wars
You should know that's true
You should know that too

I came for you
I came for you
I came for you
For you
I came for you


Lyrics submitted by Hellexise

I Came For You song meanings
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  • +3
    Song Meaning

    First of all if you’re young you may not know that this was first written and performed by Bruce Springsteen. You can not hear this song with anybody born at least in the seventies or earlier without them bringing that up every time. Then there’s always a strongly expressed opinion about who’s version is better. It’s uncanny how predictable this is every time.

    I love Bruce and his music. His channel is one of my five presets on my radio’s home screen. He’s a voice of America, an original, and a great writer and musician. But never was it so evident that he has things to say, which to him (at least in this song) are more important than the music itself. On this song he was a novelist poet trying to force a book into a song. He had way too many words in it. To further mutilate this song, Bruce’s singing style is mismatched for it. Bruce has a heavy throat and a thick slower tongue. His attempt to spit out all of the words he wrote was disfunctional at best. Think Johnny Cash singing We Didn’t Start The Fire.

    Manfred Mann cut some words out (with the result still being heavy on lyrics). This made the singing mechanically smoother and let the listener’s mind slow down from the frantic spewing of details. They sped up the music and lyrics as necessary to say all that, and that created a more defined melody to it. Then they used a more appropriate vocalist for this type of song. They accomplished more than a cover. It’s a whole different song, in my opinion, a better song.

    This was a very forgivable growing pain for Bruce. Many artists start out something that doesn’t really fit them in the beginning. I laugh looking and/or listening to James Brown’s early crooner attempts. He took a while to cut loose and become The Godfather who invented his own style. Pink Floyd was random noise before they found a way to be both different AND construct coherent (amazing) songs. Bruce wasn’t nearly as far off as those examples. He was half rock and half folk from the very beginning. He just needed some fine tuning. If he didn’t write it we wouldn’t have this version. And though this is a better sounding, technically functioning version, which is great to hear, the meaning is even better, and that’s all Bruce.

    Here’s the meaning I get from it:

    There’s a girl who’s had her heart broken (wounded deep in battle), who has retreated from the world (eyes shining vacancy), and that’s why (to see (the real) her you got to look hard).

    There’s a guy who sees through that and wants to love her, and he’s willing to do the work (like a soldier undaunted), but the most she’ll give back is a metaphorical card (with her regards), as if to say the princess is not here, thank you for your inquiry, regards, the attendant. He pleads telling her that her depression (blue walls) won’t allow her to see he loves her and he’s not trying to hurt her. He’s not trying to just drain himself in her, he (came for so much more). He came for her.

    He’s trying to save her before she’s completely dead inside (crawl into my ambulance. Your pulse is getting weak). The only way to save yourself is to allow yourself to come back out of there (reveal yourself all to me now, while you’ve got the strength to speak). The alternative is the nut house (Bellevue). And nobody can make you, and doctors can’t help you (if only you could ask)(your heart holds your fate).

    He realizes she’s not just going to come out and open herself to him. He’s going to have to fight through her walls of protection and meet her more than half way through any openings available (I’ve broken all your windows and I rammed through all your doors. Who am I to ask you to fight my wars). You just sit tight, I’m coming, because...I came for you.

    I’m a middle aged straight man’s man, but that right there is love. Love that every broken hearted person secretly hopes and deep down knows is their only possible saving grace. Sadly it usually never comes. And the truth is, he may not be successful to save her, but regardless of the result the attempt is a truly valiant display of love.

    Thank you Bruce for these words and thoughts. Thank you Manfred Mann for making it better to listen to.

    Nunyabizznezzon December 22, 2018   Link
  • 0
    General Comment

    my top 3 favourite songs ever. its just perfect.

    howdytherefolkson July 28, 2020   Link
  • 0
    General Comment

    wiki:\n"The lyrics[3] are about a woman who has attempted suicide.[4][5] She does not need the singer\'s "urgency" even though her life is "one long emergency" as Springsteen sings in the chorus (along with "and your cloud line urges me, and my electric surges free"). The singer is committed to doing anything to save her, and admires her ability to hang on.[4] "

    dan1023539on January 27, 2022   Link
  • 0
    General Comment

    A brilliant analysis! I would make one comment about the lyrics, though; I always heard the line not as, "I stand stuffed." but "I stand stock," as in standing stock still, as one might, seeing the troubling condition of his beloved. To me it makes more sense than standing stuffed, as if one's just eaten a heavy meal, but the wisdom of the Boss is in the simile, and my unhallowed hand shall not disturb it, or the song's done for.

    I also wonder what you meant by "I’m a middle aged straight man’s man, but that right there is love." There's no reason in the world that such a man may not appreciate love; on the contrary, a man who can't appreciate love is not a complete man.

    peter11803on August 09, 2022   Link

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