Free Novel Read

The Lyrics of Leonard Cohen: Enhanced Edition Page 13


  You realize, he’s only advertising one more shelter

  And it comes to you, he never was a stranger

  And you say ok the bridge or someplace later.

  And then sweeping up the jokers that he left behind ...

  And leaning on your window sill ...

  I told you when I came I was a stranger.

  One of Cohen’s earliest songs, it was included on Songs Of Leonard Cohen (1967) and on Field Commander Cohen – Tour Of 1979 (2001). A number of phrases (“he wants to trade the game he plays for shelter” and “you hate to watch another tired man / lay down his hand / like he was giving up the holy game of poker”) can be read as metaphors for Cohen’s abandonment of his literary ambitions for the “shelter” of a musical career. The song is also a good early example of a Cohen trademark – the use of religious images and vocabulary for non-religious purposes.

  The Traitor

  Now the Swan it floated on the English river

  Ah the Rose of High Romance it opened wide

  A sun tanned woman yearned me through the summer

  and the judges watched us from the other side

  I told my mother “Mother I must leave you

  preserve my room but do not shed a tear

  Should rumour of a shabby ending reach you

  it was half my fault and half the atmosphere”

  But the Rose I sickened with a scarlet fever

  and the Swan I tempted with a sense of shame

  She said at last I was her finest lover

  and if she withered I would be to blame

  The judges said you missed it by a fraction

  rise up and brace your troops for the attack

  Ah the dreamers ride against the men of action

  Oh see the men of action falling back

  But I lingered on her thighs a fatal moment

  I kissed her lips as though I thirsted still

  My falsity had stung me like a hornet

  The poison sank and it paralysed my will

  I could not move to warn all the younger soldiers

  that they had been deserted from above

  So on battlefields from here to Barcelona

  I’m listed with the enemies of love

  And long ago she said “I must be leaving,

  Ah but keep my body here to lie upon

  You can move it up and down and when I’m sleeping

  Run some wire through that Rose and wind the Swan”

  So daily I renew my idle duty

  I touch her here and there -- I know my place

  I kiss her open mouth and I praise her beauty

  and people call me traitor to my face

  Included on Recent Songs (1984), this song includes fine examples of Cohen’s literary skills. The phrase “a suntanned woman yawned me through the summer” is wonderfully evocative. An earlier version of the song, then called ‘The Traitor Song’, was played on Cohen’s 1975 tour. At that time, it was co-credited to John Lissauer, but he did not play on and is not credited for the album version.

  The Window

  Why do you stand by the window

  Abandoned to beauty and pride

  The thorn of the night in your bosom

  The spear of the age in your side

  Lost in the rages of fragrance

  Lost in the rags of remorse

  Lost in the waves of a sickness

  That loosens the high silver nerves

  Oh chosen love, Oh frozen love

  Oh tangle of matter and ghost

  Oh darling of angels, demons and saints

  And the whole broken-hearted host

  Gentle this soul

  And come forth from the cloud of unknowing

  And kiss the cheek of the moon

  The New Jerusalem glowing

  Why tarry all night in the ruin

  And leave no word of discomfort

  And leave no observer to mourn

  But climb on your tears and be silent

  Like a rose on its ladder of thorns

  Oh chosen love, Oh frozen love...

  Then lay your rose on the fire

  The fire give up to the sun

  The sun give over to splendour

  In the arms of the high holy one

  For the holy one dreams of a letter

  Dreams of a letter’s death

  Oh bless thee continuous stutter

  Of the word being made into flesh

  Oh chosen love, Oh frozen love...

  Gentle this soul

  Included on Recent Songs (1984), and also on Field Commander Cohen – Tour Of 1979 (2001), this song contains some of Cohen’s finest writing – the phrases “oh tangle of matter and ghost” and “ climb on your tears and be silent / like the rose on its ladder of thorns” rank alongside his best lyrical constructions. Unusually, Cohen uses explicitly religious language in a song with a recognisably religious theme, for he is attempting to seduce his woman not into bed but into a state of grace. The last stanza ends with a prayer that would not have disgraced the psalmist and which any poet would be proud to have penned: “oh bless the continuous stutter / of the word being made into flesh”.

  There For You

  When it all went down

  And the pain came through

  I get it now

  I was there for you

  Don’t ask me how

  I know it’s true

  I get it now

  I was there for you

  I make my plans

  Like I always do

  But when I look back

  I was there for you

  I walk the streets

  Like I used to do

  And I freeze with fear

  But I’m there for you

  I see my life

  In full review

  It was never me

  It was always you

  You sent me here

  You sent me there

  Breaking things

  I can’t repair

  Making objects

  Out of thoughts

  Making more

  By thinking not

  Eating food

  And drinking wine

  A body that

  I thought was mine

  Dressed as Arab

  Dressed as Jew

  O mask of iron

  I was there for you

  Moods of glory

  Moods so foul

  The world comes through

  A bloody towel

  And death is old

  But it’s always new

  I freeze with fear

  And I’m there for you

  I see it clear

  I always knew

  It was never me

  I was there for you

  I was there for you

  My darling one

  And by your law

  It all was done

  This song, included on Dear Heather (2004), was co-written by Sharon Robinson. Addressed to an individual woman, this song simply would be flattering and romantic. Given what we know of the complexities of his work and the richness of his love-life, it is surely a better reading to see it as addressed to womankind in general, or to the abstract Love, whose servant Cohen has ever been.

  There Is A War

  There is a war between the rich and poor,

  a war between the man and the woman.

  There is a war between the ones who say there is a war

  and the ones who say there isn’t.

  Why don’t you come on back to the war, that’s right, get in it,

  why don’t you come on back to the war, it’s just beginning.

  Well I live here with a woman and a child,

  the situation makes me kind of nervous.

  Yes, I rise up from her arms, she says “I guess you call this love”;

  I call it service.

  Why don’t you come on back to the war, don’t be a tourist,

  why don’t you come on back to t
he war, before it hurts us,

  why don’t you come on back to the war, let’s all get nervous.

  You cannot stand what I’ve become,

  you much prefer the gentleman I was before.

  I was so easy to defeat, I was so easy to control,

  I didn’t even know there was a war.

  Why don’t you come on back to the war, don’t be embarrassed,

  why don’t you come on back to the war, you can still get married.

  There is a war between the rich and poor,

  a war between the man and the woman.

  There is a war between the left and right,

  a war between the black and white,

  a war between the odd and the even.

  Why don’t you come on back to the war, pick up your tiny burden,

  why don’t you come on back to the war, let’s all get even,

  why don’t you come on back to the war, can’t you hear me speaking?

  Though this song, included on New Skin From The Old Ceremony (1974), lists a number of sociopolitical conflicts, it is clear that Cohen is only really concerned with the war between himself and Suzanne Elrod. Unfortunately, Cohen does not generalise from the particular and the song fails to rise above its partisan and somewhat bilious context.

  To A Teacher

  Dedicated to A. M. Klein (1909-1972)

  Hurt once and for all into silence.

  A long pain ending without a song to prove it.

  Who could stand beside you so close to Eden,

  When you glinted in every eye the held-high

  razor, shivering every ram and son?

  And now the silent loony bin, where

  The shadows live in the rafters like

  Day-weary bats,

  Until the turning mind, a radar signal,

  lures them to exaggerate

  Mountain-size on the white stone wall

  Your tiny limp.

  How can I leave you in such a house?

  Are there no more saints and wizards

  to praise their ways with pupils,

  No more evil to stun with the slap

  of a wet red tongue?

  Did you confuse the Messiah in a mirror

  and rest because he had finally come?

  Let me cry Help beside you, Teacher.

  I have entered under this dark roof

  As fearlessly as an honoured son

  Enters his father’s house.

  Included on Dear Heather (2004), the words of this song were originally included in Cohen’s anthology The Spice-Box Of The Earth. Abraham Moses Klein was a Canadian writer, best known as a poet and cited by Cohen as an influence. He was a significant figure on the Montreal literary scene from the Thirties onwards, and an important member of the Montreal Jewish community. After 1956, he gave up writing and became a recluse, the “silence” referred to in the song’s opening words.

  Tonight Will Be Fine

  Sometimes I find I get to thinking of the past.

  We swore to each other then that our love would surely last.

  You kept right on loving, I went on a fast,

  now I am too thin and your love is too vast.

  But I know from your eyes

  and I know from your smile

  that tonight will be fine,

  will be fine, will be fine, will be fine

  for a while.

  I choose the rooms that I live in with care,

  the windows are small and the walls almost bare,

  there’s only one bed and there’s only one prayer;

  I listen all night for your step on the stair.

  But I know from your eyes

  and I know from your smile

  that tonight will be fine,

  will be fine, will be fine, will be fine

  for a while.

  Oh sometimes I see her undressing for me,

  she’s the soft naked lady love meant her to be

  and she’s moving her body so brave and so free.

  If I’ve got to remember that’s a fine memory.

  And I know from her eyes

  and I know from her smile

  that tonight will be fine,

  will be fine, will be fine, will be fine

  for a while.

  Cohen has described this song, included on his second album Songs From A Room (1969) as the first proper song he wrote, and it contains many elements that he would return to in his later work – the sensual and elegiac tone, the failing relationship, the rainbow moments seized in the face of damnation. The second stanza contains a very good example of the experienced poet at work at the beginning of his songwriting career. Following an by all accounts accurate description of his domestic arrangements, he writes “there’s only one bed and there’s only one …” – the listener expects “chair” – “prayer”, not only hitting the rhyme and achieving surprise but leading neatly into and enhancing the succeeding line “I listen all night for your step on the stair”. The live version included on Live Songs (1973) contains two additional stanzas which, coupled with its harsher arrangement, infuse it with a bitter sarcasm absent from the original.

  Tower Of Song

  Well my friends are gone and my hair is grey

  I ache in the places where I used to play

  And I’m crazy for love but I’m not coming on

  I’m just paying my rent every day

  Oh in the Tower of Song

  I said to Hank Williams: how lonely does it get?

  Hank Williams hasn’t answered yet

  But I hear him coughing all night long

  A hundred floors above me

  In the Tower of Song

  I was born like this, I had no choice

  I was born with the gift of a golden voice

  And twenty-seven angels from the Great Beyond

  They tied me to this table right here

  In the Tower of Song

  So you can stick your little pins in that voodoo doll

  I’m very sorry, baby, doesn’t look like me at all

  I’m standing by the window where the light is strong

  Ah they don’t let a woman kill you

  Not in the Tower of Song

  Now you can say that I’ve grown bitter but of this you may be sure

  The rich have got their channels in the bedrooms of the poor

  And there’s a mighty judgement coming, but I may be wrong

  You see, you hear these funny voices

  In the Tower of Song

  I see you standing on the other side

  I don’t know how the river got so wide

  I loved you baby, way back when

  And all the bridges are burning that we might have crossed

  But I feel so close to everything that we lost

  We’ll never have to lose it again

  Yeah my friends are gone and my hair is grey

  I ache in the places where I used to play

  And I’m crazy for love but I’m not coming on

  I’m just paying my rent every day

  Oh in the Tower of Song

  A brilliantly achieved essay on the art of songwriting, this song was included on I’m Your Man (1988). Cohen has called it “one of the three or four real songs that I’ve ever written”. It surely entitles him to the rent-free lease of room in the Tower. Hank Williams (1923-1953) was a country music titan and one of the most influential songwriters of the twentieth century. A notable cover version by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds was included on the tribute album I’m Your Fan (1991).

  True Love Leaves No Traces

  As the mist leaves no scar

  On the dark green hill

  So my body leaves no scar

  On you and never will

  Through windows in the dark

  The children come, the children go

  Like arrows with no targets

  Like shackles made of snow

  True love leaves no traces

  If you and I are oner />
  It’s lost in our embraces

  Like stars against the sun

  As a falling leaf may rest

  A moment on the air

  So your head upon my breast

  So my hand upon your hair

  And many nights endure

  Without a moon or star

  So we will endure

  When one is gone and far

  True love leaves no traces

  If you and I are one

  It’s lost in our embraces

  Like stars against the sun

  Reusing two stanzas from a 1961 poem ‘As Mist Leaves No Scar’, this song from Death Of A Ladies’ Man (1977) reads on the page like a typical Cohen lyric of his early period. The musical treatment given it by Phil Spector, in one of his more manic phases, shows the distance Cohen had travelled musically at that time, but also suggests that he had travelled involuntarily. As such, historically if not lyrically, it represents a nadir in Cohen’s career.

  Undertow

  I set out one night

  When the tide was low

  There were signs in the sky

  But I did not know

  I’d be caught in the grip

  Of the undertow

  Ditched on a beach

  Where the sea hates to go

  With a child in my arms

  And a chill in my soul

  And my heart the shape

  Of a begging bowl

  A short but effective song, economically exhibiting Cohen’s poetic skill, it was included on Dear Heather (2004).

  Waiting For The Miracle

  Baby, I’ve been waiting,

  I’ve been waiting night and day.

  I didn’t see the time,

  I waited half my life away.

  There were lots of invitations

  and I know you sent me some,

  but I was waiting

  for the miracle, for the miracle to come.

  I know you really loved me.

  but, you see, my hands were tied.

  I know it must have hurt you,

  it must have hurt your pride

  to have to stand beneath my window

  with your bugle and your drum,

  and me I’m up there waiting

  for the miracle, for the miracle to come.

  Ah I don’t believe you’d like it,

  You wouldn’t like it here.