Song Meaning
The narrator confronts a profound fragility, presenting a collection of "tiny bones" as the literal architecture of their love. This isn't a metaphor; it's a stark, almost visceral image of what holds their emotional world together. The bones are identified as "you and you and you," suggesting a deep connection to multiple loved ones, forming the "skeleton of love." The narrator's posture, "at attention / Like a dog waiting," underscores a passive, anxious state, utterly dependent on the presence of these loved ones.
The core tension lies in the precariousness of this structure. The narrator acknowledges the potential for annihilation: "A garbage truck could flatten them" or "a wind could scatter them apart." This vulnerability is amplified in the second verse, where the bones are compared to "remnants of a bird / Without the guts, without the word." The imagery of being "flush[ed] away" with "rain into the gutter" paints a picture of inevitable loss, where "everything I love would go."
The most striking craft element is the persistent, almost ritualistic repetition of "These tiny bones / I lay them on my life / They are you and you and you." This refrain grounds the abstract concept of love in a tangible, yet terrifyingly delicate, physical form. The shift to "pearl bones" in the final verse introduces a note of preciousness, but this is immediately undercut by the desperate wish for safety and the stark realization of their scarcity: "So few, so few." The title itself, "Family of Bones," encapsulates this paradox – a familial connection built on something so inherently lifeless and breakable.