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My Night With the Prostitute from Marseille Lyrics

and we believed her then
and we believed her then
and we believed her then
and we believed her then

and now outside you see the waves in her eyes
and I, I won't mind what you decide to swear by
and now oustide, you see the waves in her eyes
and I, and I won't mind what you decide to swear by

and now outside I see your eyes meet the sky
and I, I don't mind what you decide to swear by
and now outside, I see your eyes meet the sky
and I, I won't lie, I kept you here tonight

and I believed her then
and I believed her then
and I believed her then
and I believed her then
16 Meanings

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Cover art for My Night With the Prostitute from Marseille lyrics by Beirut

I didn't interpret this as being metaphorical. I think he spends the night with the prostitute not because he's horny, but because he's lonely.

"and now outside you see the waves in her eyes and I, I won't mind what you decide to swear by"

"and now outside I see your eyes meet the sky and I, I don't mind what you decide to swear by"

These lines seem to depict a certain sense of admiration because he finds this woman to be beautiful. When he says, "I don't mind what you decide to swear by," he is saying that he doesn't care what she thinks. Even if to her, he is just another customer, his experience is much deeper than that.

"and I, I won't lie, I kept you here tonight"

This line could mean a couple different things. For one, it could be his admission that although he feels a connection with her, she has no reason to be with him tonight besides money. But the way I first thought of it was that she stayed the whole night. She was going to leave to either go to sleep or find another customer or whatever prostitutes do, but he wanted to sleep with her. And I mean, actually sleep. After the sex. He wants this because he feels alone and being with a beautiful woman, he feels connected to someone. And it's important to him. He loves this woman. And not in the way that you love a friend or girlfriend or boyfriend or spouse or family member. It's just a sort of adoration and thankfulness for making him feel less alone, if only for the night.

My Interpretation

This was a great interpretation with a very beautiful and human feel to it. Just thinking about this idea while listening to the song feels right, kudos.

Now, that was a really lovely comment, congrats.

Great interpretation.

"We believed her then" I think it implies something of a profound loneliness in which one becomes very aware and converses with the "self". The 'we' is rhetorical. There is this void within one's self that echoes only one's thoughts. The very depths of despair. And he sought a prostitute believing it would cure what ails him.

"and now outside you see the waves in her eyes" She is what he had hoped she was and he is reminded of her

"and now outside, I see your eyes meet the sky" And he...

Cover art for My Night With the Prostitute from Marseille lyrics by Beirut

Another amazing song from Beirut. I cannot get sick of this song.

Cover art for My Night With the Prostitute from Marseille lyrics by Beirut

what album/ep is this off? i love it!

This is off of his new upcoming CD "March of the Zapotec". I think it'll be released in February.

you can download it here..http://brettrhoades.tumblr.com/

it's actually off the Realpeople Holland EP, which was released as a double along with the March of the Zapotec EP

Cover art for My Night With the Prostitute from Marseille lyrics by Beirut

it's off of Big Change: Songs for FINCA

Cover art for My Night With the Prostitute from Marseille lyrics by Beirut

this song has a postal service feel to it. me likey :)

Cover art for My Night With the Prostitute from Marseille lyrics by Beirut

heard this song for the first time last night and it's already reached 8 on my itunes playcount.

how beautiful is this. i wish he'd do more tracks like this --- his voice kills ben gibbard's!

Cover art for My Night With the Prostitute from Marseille lyrics by Beirut

This song is really deep for a song with few words and a simple tune.I usually don't like electronic tunes, but it's definitely appropriate here.

I like the intimacy between the prostitute being referenced to and "I."

It's on March of the Zapotec/Holland double EP by the way.

Cover art for My Night With the Prostitute from Marseille lyrics by Beirut

For me, maybe because I'm hearing this song in the midst of a certain situation, and I'm putting the song into that context (...well, I guess that's what we all tend to do), the prostitute is Love. And that Love is sort of fantastical and magic, but you let yourself believe that it is real. And even when you maybe start to realize that it won't work out after all, youo still cling to it, wanting to believe in it still. If you have doubt, Love tells you, "I swear on ___ (the Bible, my mother's life, etc.)"; you want to believe so badly that you just believe, without requiring any particular form of validation. You just wanted this Love to be real, to work out, but it won't. Maybe it was just a hired imitation and you fooled yourself into thinking it could be something else. But you believed Her.

Cover art for My Night With the Prostitute from Marseille lyrics by Beirut

Personally want to be able to listen to or see or read something and feel something and not know why. I love this song and I really think you have to find your own meaning, if zach condon wanted us to feel something specific the lyrics would be obvious.

Cover art for My Night With the Prostitute from Marseille lyrics by Beirut

The artist should be listed as "Real People". This album is technically a split of Zachary Condon's two projects; Beirut - his indie/world project, and Real People - his electronic project he started doing when he was much, much younger.

 
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