He feels a need to belong but is not in the right frame of mind. Achory from Warner Robins, Gaokay, before i go into a rant on the pink floyd=nazis strain, i want to clear up a few lyrical issues: 1. at the beginning, he's shouting "eins, zwei, drie, alle! " In the dystopian nightmare of The Wall they, led by an insane Pink, have taken control of the country and are starting their own holocaust. Like many people who follow a gross mistake with the statement 'I'm so stupid! '
Touch Too Much||anonymous|. All have had some o'this. ) The implication would be that the crowd is unanimously choosing MAMMON (riches, wealth, power, etc... ). It was a stage in Pink's life when he was influenced by many things and couldn't do more than wait for the worms (insanity) to completely consume him. I dont think its neccessary to see the movie to really get the story, you just have to listen closely. I listened to this a million times. The feeling of worms crawling over your body when you're coming down and don't have another fix. Joel from Columbia, ScI think that Pink has already gone insane. The National Front is a white supremacist group that makes occasional bids for power in the UK. The 'worms' are literal, i. e., after you die, the worms eat you up. In fact, they were very much anti-war. Or go here --> William from Boston, MaThe worms are the leaders of the allies.
Waiting for the worms to come Worms to come. WAITING FOR THE WORMS. For example the hammers are a metaphore for the "hooked cross" (the nazy symbole), pink's story is a metaphore for real things not about the metaphore it's self. Not* a literal statement of any kind. But you have to look deeper than that. Sitting in a bunker, Here behind my wall, Waiting for the worms to come. It is a heavy criticism of nazism and of all totalitarisms. You cannot serve God AND mammon. " The dictator in Roger would be the one who wanted that crowd of however many thousand people o shut up and listen to his music, the one that spat in the face of the fan in the front row. First off, it's Sydd*, and Sydd had left the band in 68. Does anybody know wot is sed?
It's documented in the various histories of the recording of the album. Find more lyrics at ※. Brixton is, and was at the time, a largely black area. I must keep referring back to "the wall", with the little rag doll hiding behind the wall he's built. Thomas from Toronto, CanadaNo, the meaning of "Waiting for the worms: is far deeper. Same goes for many other underplayed songs.