He claims to have set fire to his own house, barn, and stable—with the cow inside.
Hoe two or three hectares of his land because the weeds are getting too high. Fara Zahar - Sandu (Official Video)
He intends to drive the carriage into a ravine, which he predicts will be his coffin. 4. The Moral (and the Punchline) He claims to have set fire to his
The song concludes on a comedic note of incompetence: as he is speeding toward his death, he suddenly realizes he has no one to deliver the letter to the postman. Sandu is jealous of a rival suitor named
He hasn't gone alone; he kidnapped Gerula, hit him with a crowbar, and tied him to the carriage's brake.
Sandu is jealous of a rival suitor named . In his letter, he claims he is "tougher than Gerula" and threatens that if Stella doesn't love him, he will drink gasoline and set himself on fire. 3. The Grand Finale (The "Suicide" Attempt)
The "love" Sandu offers is purely transactional and absurdly rural. In the chorus and outro, he admits that he would have loved her she had been willing to: Mow the grass in his yard.