Song Meaning
This is a Latin incantation, a powerful summoning or commanding of demonic entities. The opening lines directly address various types of demons – blind, lame, or confused – demanding their attention and obedience to the speaker's words. It establishes a tone of authority and ritualistic power, setting the stage for a serious invocation.
The core of the ritual lies in invoking potent figures and symbols to enforce the command. The speaker calls upon the "seal of Solomon" and the "magicians of Pharaoh," figures associated with immense mystical power and ancient knowledge. This is followed by a direct conjuring and exorcism, emphasizing the speaker's intent to control and banish these forces.
The repeated phrase "Ingordin Ingordan" acts as a central, perhaps invented, name or command word for the entities being addressed, creating a hypnotic, rhythmic anchor for the incantation. The invocation of the Three Magi (Casper, Melchior, Balthasar) and King David, who famously soothed Saul, further grounds the ritual in historical and biblical figures known for their power over spiritual or emotional turmoil, suggesting a desire to impose order.
The lyrics then shift to describing the nature of the entities being commanded, calling them "creatures of phantasms" that strengthen the "principality of the twisted, venomous serpent." This serpent is explicitly linked to drawing "a third part of the stars through pride," a clear allusion to Lucifer's fall. The repeated "Gordan, Gordan; Ingordin et Ingordan" intensifies the command, making the lyrics an exercise in linguistic and spiritual dominance, designed to bind and control powerful, fallen entities through ancient, potent language.