Have mercy on me, sir
Allow me to impose on you
I have no place to stay
And my bones are cold right through
I will tell you a story
Of a man and his family
And I swear that it is true
Ten years ago I met a girl named Joy
She was a sweet and happy thing
Her eyes were bright blue jewels
And we were married in the spring
I had no idea what happiness a little love could bring
Or what life had in store
But all things move toward their end
All things move toward their end
On that you can be sure

(Hit it)

Then one morning I awoke to find her weeping
And for many days to follow
She grew so sad and lonely
Became Joy in name only
Within her breast there launched an unnamed sorrow
And a dark and grim force set sail
Farewell happy fields
Where joy forever dwells
Hail horrors hail

Was it an act of contrition or some awful premonition
As if she saw into the heart of her final blood-soaked night
Those lunatic eyes, that hungry kitchen knife
Ah, I see sir, that I have your attention!
Well, could it be?
How often have I asked that question
Well, then in quick succession
We had babies, one, two, three

We called them Hilda, Hattie and Holly
They were their mother's children
Their eyes were bright blue jewels
And they were quiet as a mouse
There was no laughter in the house
No, not for Hilda, Hattie or Holly
"No wonder", people said, "Poor mother Joy's so melancholy"
Well, one night there came a visitor to our little home
I was visiting a sick friend
I was a doctor then
Joy and the girls were on their own, yeah

Joy had been bound with electrical tape
In her mouth a gag
She'd been stabbed repeatedly
And stuffed into a sleeping bag
In their very cots my girls were robbed of their lives
Method of murder much the same as my wife's
Method of murder much the same as my wife's
It was midnight when I arrived home
Said to the police on the telephone
Someone's taken four innocent lives

They never caught the man
He's still on the loose
It seems he has done many, many more
Quotes John Milton on the walls in the victim's blood
The police are investigating at tremendous cost
In my house he wrote "His red right hand"
That, I'm told is from Paradise Lost
The wind round here gets wicked cold
But my story is nearly told
I fear the morning will bring quite a frost

So I've left my home
I drift from land to land
I am upon your step and you are a family man
Outside the vultures wheel
The wolves howl, the serpents hiss
And to extend this small favor, friend
Would be the sum of earthly bliss
Do you reckon me a friend?
The sun to me is dark
And silent as the moon
Do you, sir, have a room?
Are you beckoning me in? (Hit it)


Lyrics submitted by typo, edited by aenimal

Song of Joy Lyrics as written by Nicholas Cave

Lyrics © BMG Rights Management

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Song of Joy song meanings
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31 Comments

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  • +3
    General Comment

    This song for me centres around the ambiguity of weather the narrator is the killer and the irony of his wife being named Joy .

    gloom, that's an interesting idea i hadn't thought of the inclusion of "Red Right Hand" in the song in quite those terms before...

    Girgo, I don't think that the character in Red right Hand can possibly be the same as the character in Song of Joy simply for me the character in Red Right Hand is God. the quote from Milton itself refers to the possibility of God's vengeance on the rebels.

    en.wikisource.org/wiki/Paradise_Lost/Book_I

    Farewell, happy fields, Where joy for ever dwells! Hail, horrors! hail,

    Doesn't the fact that he quotes paradise lost, almost abscent-mindedly during the recounting of the tale of his children's and wife's murder clarly point to him as being the murderer? He appears to be further implicated when he claims that the killer "In my house he wrote "his red right hand" That, I'm told is from Paradise Lost".

    The fact that the narrator first quotes Paradise Lost in conversation and then claims to have no knowledge of it, for me seals the case that he is the killer.

    affe, I don't see any evidence of the killer suffering from a split personailty or of this song being a kind of retelling of Jekyl and Hyde.

    I think this song is about a family man and doctor whose wife became depressed and he grew bored of her and in revenge (the quotation of Milton "His Red Right Hand" supports the theme of vengeanvce if you look at it in it's original context) he murdered them and took up the life of a vagrant to kill others.

    GravityAlwaysWins I think that it is the latter. I think the quotation from paradise lost

    Farewell, happy fields, Where joy for ever dwells! Hail, horrors! hail,

    summarises not only the oncoming of Joy's depression but of the narrator's desire to murder his family.

    Dressed2Depresson July 29, 2006   Link

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