Given how much I've been blogging about Samson lately (here and at The Magician's Table) and about songs about New Orleans, and given how often I cite the lyrics of Leonard Cohen, it might seem hard to believe that I never knew there was a Leonard Cohen song called "Samson in New Orleans." But I didn't. I discovered it tonight.
Here are the lyrics, with a few interesting passages highlighted.
You said that you were with me
You said you were my friend
Did you really love the city
Or did you just pretend
You said you loved her secrets
And her freedoms hid away
She was better than America
That’s what I heard you say
You said how could this happen
You said how can this be
The remnant all dishonored
On the bridge of misery
And we who cried for mercy
From the bottom of the pit
Was our prayer so damn unworthy
The Son rejected it?
So gather up the killers
Get everyone in town
Stand me by those pillars
Let me take this temple down
The king so kind and solemn
He wears a bloody crown
So stand me by that column
Let me take this temple down
You said how could this happen
You said how can this be
The chains are gone from heaven
The storms are wild and free
There’s other ways to answer
That certainly is true
Me, I’m blind with death and anger
And that’s no place for you
There’s a woman in the window
And a bed in Tinsel Town
I’ll write you when it’s over
Let me take this temple down
Deus vult.
2 comments:
Everything needed for a Samson moment is in place. All Samson has to do is make his presence known.
On a side note, one of my favorite songs about New Orleans is by the Canadian band, The Tragically Hip. The song is called "New Orleans is Sinking" and the most memorable lines from the song are:
"My memory is muddy, what's this river that I'm in?
New Orleans is sinking man and I don't wanna swim"
Here's hoping Samson wants to swim, so to speak. Or, conversely, here's hoping Slow Joe Crow doesn't want to swim.
Anyway, here's a link to the tune if you're interested:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zd-x9H6lfMs
What is it with Canadians singing about New Orleans?
At first I misread the song title as "The New Orleans is Sinking" and thought it was about a ship. Every time I listen to Johnny Horton's "Battle of New Orleans," YouTube suggests that I might like to hear that singer's other military-history hit, "Sink the Bismarck."
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