Letra Man Of Iron de Bathory original
I have paced these forests for so long I don't know if I am man or I am beast. I, though, hold deep within me a quest for revenge. Then I must be a man as much as I can be. I have learned to speak the tongue of the animal I have learned to read the signs in bark and snow. I have taken within myself the spirits of my fathers, Long time gone. In this short time, far from home, a man of Iron I've grown. A man of Iron I have grown. A part of the Eternal Woods... Late evening... 'Just after sunset on his way back to his camp after watching the sun unite> with the mountains in the west, he sees the flickering of light between the> tree trunks. Approaching, he sees an old man sitting calmly by a fire, as> if waiting for him. His left eye missing. His beard as if gold. The signs> on his cloak and hood familiar. The one eyed old man matches the> description of the soothsayer, as told by the elders of his village by the> fires at night when he only a child. The boy, now a young man, eager to> know, asks the one eyed old man about his dreams. Dreams he cannot> understand. Dreams about strange things he is seeing himself doing. Then> the winds that seem to talk to him. Voices that whisper to him behind his> back. The one eyed old man tells him of the cycles of the stars, of the> trail of fate and of the valley where time and space had ceased to exist...> where his world ends and the shadows begin. The one eyed old man tells the> young man that fate has chosen him to interfere with the other world. The> disturbance is already made. The daughters of the four winds have sold> themselves to the shadows, distorting the balance of the universe. And the> one eyed old man says he has seen him come for a thousand years, and that>-acapo