Song Meaning
This is a song about rain, but more accurately, it's about the narrator's relationship with it. The rain is presented not as a destructive force, but as a constant, almost benevolent presence. It's a force that "bears it" and offers an "unselfish palm," suggesting a source of solace or acceptance. The repeated phrase "Stá pieseň o daždi" (A hundred songs about rain) frames these observations as a recurring theme, a constant in the narrator's life.
The central tension lies in the rain's paradoxical nature. It "doesn't bother with knocking, yet enters with a knock," implying an intrusion that is both unexpected and yet somehow expected. The narrator recognizes that failing to "offer my palms" to this rain will lead to self-inflicted harm. This suggests that confronting or accepting the rain, whatever it represents, is crucial for personal well-being.
The lyrics employ striking imagery to personify the rain. It's described as "perpendicular, yielding water that pays tribute to Earth's gravity," a scientific observation that also imbues it with a sense of inevitable, natural force. Later, it becomes a "poem of descent and water, the un-sister of sonnets," elevating the rain to an artistic, albeit unconventional, form. This elevates the rain beyond mere weather into something profound and enduring.
What makes these lyrics resonate is their quiet insistence on acceptance. The rain "simply lasts," and the song about it is "a hundred times different, a hundred times first." This cyclical, enduring quality of the rain, and the narrator's willingness to engage with it, offers a perspective on life's persistent challenges. The rain, and the songs about it, are a constant, a familiar companion that, when met with open hands, offers its own kind of wisdom.