It would be rushing in
Instead here we are
In a silence more eloquent
Than any word could ever be
These words are too solid
They don't move fast enough
To catch the blur in the brain
That flies by and is gone
Gone
Gone
Gone
I'd like to meet you
In a timeless, placeless place
Somewhere out of context
And beyond all consequences
Let's go back to the building
(Words are too solid)
On Little West Twelfth
It is not far away
(They don't move fast enough)
And the river is there
And the sun and the spaces
Are all laying low
(To catch the blur in the brain)
And we'll sit in the silence
(That flies by and is)
That comes rushing in and is
Gone (Gone)
I won't use words again
They don't mean what I meant
They don't say what I said
They're just the crust of the meaning
With realms underneath
Never touched
Never stirred
Never even moved through
If language were liquid
It would be rushing in
Instead here we are
In a silence more eloquent
Than any word could ever be
And is gone
Gone
Gone
And is gone
9 comments:
More damnable NIHILISM –– the doctrine of the anti-Christ.
Is that what you heard in the sound track running through your head, Trevor?
It's right there in the terrible, self-absorbed despondency of the text. A dreary theme that has dominated most of twentieth-century and post-twentieth-century "art and letters."
You don't get out much, Trevor, do you?
Acheronta movebo.
This song might as well accompany None the Richer's "There she goes".
Needs more cowbell
shut up
There's more to music than words, no doubt!
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