Lyric discussion by beckyvi 

okay, this is going to be long but this song means a lot to me and i've listened to it so much i have a pretty good interpretation of the entire thing. bare with me, it's going to be long. xo

Like faithful oxen through the chalk, With dragging tails of history walk. Soon confuse the compass and the cross. Carefully and cursively we fill our traveling diaries with loss.

He's talking about the woman he loves, how she's basically like oxygen to him. He can't live without her. They've made a lot of memories and in their travels they've gotten lost from religion. the actual 'history book' basically refers to their past so they've filled it with loss, but the loss of religion i think and people who are religious like family and friends and such.

Beneath an angry Bible flood, Did you and I first learn to love. In my father's car we came to know. And shivered in our painted clothes and paired like every animal below.

You're meant to not have sex before marriage when you're religious so they shagged i suppose and that's basically it. My friend went through this with me, it's basically just that and how it shows they're rebelling against their family and religion and joining with nature, hence the animal reference.

As heavy as a history book can be, I will carry it with me, oh Lord. And maybe when the bitterness has gone, There'll be sweetness on our tongues once more.

He's talking to God and being like "Well whatever it may be a lot to deal with but I'm not going to just drop it. And maybe when the people have gotten over the fact we're in love and that we're not going to abide by his rules then everything will be okay again."

Barefoot in a rowing boat, You lose your shoes and freeze your toes. And say I wear my sorrow like a crown. And throw your arms around my head, and see it there in gold and red and brown.

Pretty much another line about sex. Red and Gold are probably quite religious colours (i'm not religious, i don't know) and brown is a bit like mud so it links back to the whole idea of joining nature and leaving God. I think the crown bit shows that even though he's sad about loosing everyone, he's his own king now, he's in charge of his own life, not God and maybe his girl is congratulating him with boat sex or something.

As heavy as a history book can be, I will carry it with me, oh Lord. And maybe when the bitterness has gone, There'll be sweetness on our tongues once more.

(SAB)

We'll soon forget our parents' names, Like dogs we'll drive the wolves away. And weep with fingertips opposed, Like a church where nobody congregates.

Everything will be forgotten. They may be weak but they can stand strong against their opposition (dogs vs wolves). And they may be sad but they're not a church so they're happier. I really can't explain the last line but it makes so much sense in my head. It's like they're weeping in the same way they'd pray, much like the pastor at their church must be when people stop congregating there. Something like that, I dont know.

But sweetness sings in the pasture, We throw ourselves on the mercy of the earth. If sand and salt have the answer, Then the act itself will be louder than the word.

The good times are in like fields so nature so lets just go for it and live there instead of being all religous. If nature has the answer then having sex before marriage is more powerful than preaching about it.

And I'll be on your side.

He'll be on her side.

That's my interpretation, thank you if you got this far, sorry if you don't like it and also sorry if it's wrong, i'm not a part of Dry The River so i can't really say i know what it's about. That's all really, thank you if you liked it :) xox

The song is completely a story. The first verse, which is more of a present time, does refer to loss, but not within themselves, as they go on together carrying the weight of what they've lost as one. And how the "lines" blur between what is right, and what may very well be wrong. 2nd verse is a flashback to when they were young, and part of the bible references are symbolic, and some literal. "Beneath an angry Bible flood, Did you and I first learn to loveIn my father's car we came to know. And shivered in our painted clothes and...

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