Love-Hounds-request@GAFFA.MIT.EDU (10/27/89)
Really-From: keving%gaffa.wpd.sgi.com@sgi.sgi.com (Kevin Gurney) So like this complete Kate neophyte friend of mine was listening to the new cd over my shoulder and noticed this little bit of strangeness in "Never Be Mine": "The smell of burning fields Will now mean you and here." At first I thought she must have meant to write "you _ARE_ here", but no, she actually sings "you and here". What does this mean? We guess that she means "Will now mean 'you' and 'here'" as in "the burning fields remind me of both you and this place." Other opinions? -- "See how the child reaches out instinctively to feel how fire will feel" - Kate Bush "Reaching Out" keving@gaffa.wpd.sgi.com
de0t+@ANDREW.CMU.EDU (Daniel S. Efran") (11/03/89)
>she actually sings "you and here". What does this mean? We guess that she >means > "Will now mean 'you' and 'here'" > >as in "the burning fields remind me of both you and this place." As far as I can tell, that's what she means. --Dan "The Sphere who comments on too many messages" Efran