Three Women & The Sea
Inkubus Sukkubus Lyrics


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She said that water had an even depth where monsters lay
She said she knew they'd drag her to her death beneath the spray
I feel so creatures would envelop her she only knew
That die she would a tragic victim and a martyr too

CHORUS:
Sisters united, sisters divided
Sisters united, sisters divided
By the sea

She said she had a feel the sea would take her breath from her
It's all pervading flow would fill her lungs without a can
As useless limbs betrayed her weakened might the ocean's might
She'd slip away beneath the brook into the endless night

CHORUS

I said I feared the blackness, feared the things I couldn't see
Of water black as ink, blackness to infinity
I guessed for hours with a fear but with a longing too
To disappear completely and to live a life anew





CHORUS

Overall Meaning

The Inkubus Sukkubus's song Three Women & The Sea is a haunting and poetic tribute to the power and mystery of the ocean. The three different verses of the song center around three women who are all drawn to the sea, but have very different relationships with its treacherous depths. The first woman described is someone who has a premonition that she will be dragged to her death beneath the waves by the monsters that lurk there. Despite her fear, she seems resigned to her fate, knowing that she will go down as a tragic victim and martyr. The second woman described feels that the sea will take her breath away and fill her lungs, causing her to drown. She feels her own physical weakness and helplessness against the overwhelming power of the ocean. The third woman, the singer herself, is both fascinated and terrified by the unknown depths below the surface. She is scared of what she can't see and the blackness that seems to extend into infinity. However, there is also a sense of longing for something greater, a desire to disappear completely and start anew.


Overall, the three women symbolize different aspects of humanity's relationship with the natural world. The first woman represents a sense of fatalism, the belief that we are at the mercy of larger forces beyond our control. The second woman represents a sense of humility, the acknowledgement of our own limitations and vulnerability. The third woman represents a sense of awe, the realization that there is so much more to existence than what we can immediately perceive.


Line by Line Meaning

She said that water had an even depth where monsters lay
She believed that the water had a uniform depth where dangerous creatures dwelled


She said she knew they'd drag her to her death beneath the spray
She was certain that the monsters would pull her down to her demise under the splashing water


I feel so creatures would envelop her she only knew
She had a premonition that the creatures would enclose around her, and it was the only thing she knew


That die she would a tragic victim and a martyr too
She was convinced that she would die horribly, making her a sorrowful victim and a martyr


She said she had a feel the sea would take her breath from her
She sensed that the sea would snatch her breath away and suffocate her


It's all pervading flow would fill her lungs without a can
The ubiquitous movement of the sea would invade her lungs with no room for air


As useless limbs betrayed her weakened might the ocean's might
Her unavailing limbs gave up on her weakened power against the ocean's supremacy


She'd slip away beneath the brook into the endless night
She would slide down under the stream, into an everlasting darkness


I said I feared the blackness, feared the things I couldn't see
I admitted my terror of the obscurity, especially of the indiscernible things lurking within it


Of water black as ink, blackness to infinity
The water as black as ink, the darkness reaching on into infinity


I guessed for hours with a fear but with a longing too
I made assumptions for hours with both alarm and yearning


To disappear completely and to live a life anew
To vanish entirely and begin a new life


Sisters united, sisters divided
The sisters were either in harmony or at odds with each other


Sisters united, sisters divided
The sisters were either in harmony or at odds with each other


By the sea
The setting of the story is beside the sea




Contributed by Michael L. Suggest a correction in the comments below.
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