I'm not ignoring you and I just wanted to say that I've been really busy lately with Christmas stuff and other things happening. So forgive me, but my brain is not into dissecting or discussing this album at the moment. I'll see what happens later

Sorry, when I said that this song was romantic, what I tried to say (not very well) is that romance doesn't just have to do with what happens in a relationship between two people, but it also refers to all of those things that can "sweep you off your feet". It can be things like reading the quests of King Arthur or JRR Tolkien's trilogy or seeing the temples on the Acropolis or watching the sunset in Hydraits4inthemorning wrote:Re the short Verse 8, if we conjecture that the words are dealing solely with romantic relationships, they take on a bit of a disagreeable tone
I am glad I am not the only one that thought that.Curiously, I too think of Suzanne Elrod when I hear the "I should have seen it coming" line, and for the same reasons. I cannot imagine him saying "Just to look at her was trouble" about his muse Marianne.
Now that you mention it, yes it does!Since you took us to another level by focusing a verse, I will do so too.
"Then I studied with this beggar
He was filthy, he was scarred
By the claws of many women
He had failed to disregard
No fable here, no lesson
No singing meadowlark
Just a filthy beggar guessing
What happens to the heart"
Now, I might have been influenced by the video, but as I read these words I feel they must be referencing Roshi. After all, Cohen did study with Roshi, Roshi was fascinated with women, and ultimately that fascination caused scars (the public allegations of sexual misconduct). Does this verse strike anyone else the same way?
What a fine, fine account of one of those instances that live with us forever and is usually indescribable, but of course, as usual, Leonard describes it easily!its4inthemorning wrote: "Her thighs they slipped away from me
Like schools of startled fish
Though I've forgotten half my life
I still remember this"
its4inthemorning wrote: ↑Sat Feb 08, 2020 2:58 am ...I agree that "The Night in Santiago" has received very little mention or discussion. IMO the story must have its roots with some relationship that Leonard had years ago, some fond memories that never disappeared ("though I've forgotten half my life I still remember this.") I cannot recall ever reading that Leonard visited Chile, but there are probably other Santiagos...
its4inthemorning wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2020 4:57 pm ..."why would God allow atrocities such as the Holocaust to happen?"...
I have no objection at all to the general drift of what you're saying, but I did want to note that there are a few other possible options in response to the "problem of evil in a universe created by a benevolent, omnipotent, and omniscient God." The really important one you leave out is often referred to as "the free will" solution. God, in his goodness, although it doesn't always feel like goodness to his creatures, chooses not to exercise his omnipotence in regards to his creatures' wills, allowing them to commit evil and to live in an imperfect and dangerous world. This also includes the idea that even God cannot overrule the logic that he himself created, so he can't grant free will without that entailing suffering. As Cohen put it in song: he "meant it as a kind of trial."LisaLCFan wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2020 7:24 pmits4inthemorning wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2020 4:57 pm ..."why would God allow atrocities such as the Holocaust to happen?"...
Ah, yes, the eternal "Problem of Evil" for those who choose to believe in an omnipotent, benevolent, and omniscient God. There is, of course, no answer to this question, at least not one that will satisfy everybody. Possible options: a) god is evil (i.e., not benevolent); b) god is incompetent (i.e., not omnipotent nor omniscient); c) god is psychotic; or, d) there is no god. Many choose "d", because it explains things rather well and quite simply, without raising endless questions that cannot be answered. Dear old William of Ockham favoured simple explanations for things, those that did not involve making multiple assumptions. It is perhaps a bit ironic that William used his reasoning (which is now referred to as "Occam's Razor") to explain the existence of divine miracles, without apparently realising that an even simpler explanation is that there is no god.
Of course, the universe is a very complex place, and so there really is no persuasive reason to believe that the simplest explanation is usually the correct one -- it may well be that the most complicated explanations get closer to the truth. I doubt if I'll ever know, because, even if I do happen to stumble upon "the truth", I have no way of knowing it -- it would likely seem, to me, to be just one more possible answer. Some people are okay with not knowing, some aren't. I'm in the former group -- accepting "not knowing" these things as an inevitability of our existence makes life much more peaceful.
Regards!
lschwart wrote: ↑Thu Feb 13, 2020 7:30 pm ...there are a few other possible options in response to the "problem of evil in a universe created by a benevolent, omnipotent, and omniscient God." The really important one you leave out is often referred to as "the free will" solution. God, in his goodness, although it doesn't always feel like goodness to his creatures, chooses not to exercise his omnipotence in regards to his creatures' wills, allowing them to commit evil and to live in an imperfect and dangerous world. This also includes the idea that even God cannot overrule the logic that he himself created, so he can't grant free will without that entailing suffering. As Cohen put it in song: he "meant it as a kind of trial."
You're welcome. And refraining is, indeed probably best, since this isn't the place for getting into arguments about things like that. And it's not an option I'd feel obligated to defend, in any case, although it does have some virtues for getting through the night with some sense that the night has some meaning. Not that there aren't, of course, lots of other ways to do that--some involving God, others not.LisaLCFan wrote: ↑Thu Feb 13, 2020 7:47 pm Hi Louis! Thanks for the thoughtful response, very nice of you to take the time. I am, of course, aware of that "possible option" (I didn't say that my list was exhaustive), as well as the fact that an awful lot of people seem to believe it. However, I shall be polite and refrain from saying exactly what I think of it!
As John Lennon put it in song: "Whatever gets you thru the night"! Cheers!