Song Meaning
The lyrics to "Cromlech" immediately plunge the listener into a grim, inescapable descent. The speaker falls "Into the abyss," describing a "Dark... reich of the dead." It's a chaotic, almost apocalyptic scene where "bodies fall from the sky," setting a tone of profound unease and inevitability.
This dark vision is deepened by a series of unsettling paradoxes. "Solitude and Peace of Mind" are not found but rather "Entombed in Cromlech," suggesting that even solace is trapped within a tomb. The invitation to "join the dead with joy" further twists conventional notions of death, presenting it not as an end to be feared, but a destination to be embraced with a chilling enthusiasm.
The lyrics then invoke a specific, non-traditional spiritual landscape, referencing the mythological "River Styx" and an "ocean of Blasphemy, Heathenish realm." Intriguingly, the philosophical tenet "Do What Thou Wilt" is explicitly labeled a "decoy." This suggests that any promise of ultimate freedom or self-determination within this dark domain is merely a false lure, masking a deeper, perhaps more sinister, reality.
The speaker's final, prophetic declaration – "My Prophecy is true... We'll all make it through" – acts as a chilling, ambiguous comfort. In this context, "making it through" doesn't imply survival in the traditional sense, but rather an inevitable passage into this death-realm. It redefines destiny, forcing the listener to confront a deeply unsettling vision where the ultimate journey is not escape, but a collective, joyful embrace of the abyss.