Give Me Your Hand
Give Me Your Hand - meaning Summary
Simple Dance of Union
This short lyric presents a spare, intimate invitation to shared companionship. The speaker asks for hand and love, proposing a dance that reduces identity to simple natural images — a flower, grass, a dance on the hills — suggesting release from names and roles. The poem emphasizes transience and unity: mutual surrender and ordinary gestures become sufficient for emotional connection and freedom from social labels.
Read Complete AnalysesGive me your hand and give me your love, give me your hand and dance with me. A single flower, and nothing more, a single flower is all we'll be. Keeping time in the dance together, you'll be singing the song with me. Grass in the wind, and nothing more, grass in the wind is all we'll be. I'm called Hope and you're called Rose: but losing our names we'll both go free, a dance on the hills, and nothing more, a dance on the hills is all we'll be.
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