Red River Shore Lyrics

Lyric discussion by Loserido 

Cover art for Red River Shore lyrics by Bob Dylan

I read an interpretation of this song on another side that I think is the most fitting.

The song is about a young man in love with a girl, but she dies early and the man can't accept it. In fact, he starts imagining her alive so strongly he practically hallucinates it. But now he's old and reflects ver the fact that she's not real.

Several lines give clues to much of it being imagination.

"Though nothing looks familiar to me I know I've stayed here before"

It's a world he imagined, the real world seems strange to him.

"Everybody that I talked to had seen us there Said they didn't know who I was talking about"

Pretty self-explanatory.

"Some of us turn off the lights and we live In the moonlight shooting by Some of us scare ourselves to death in the dark To be where the angels fly"

Some are affected by death, others are not. He is.

etc.

But ss always with Dylan, this is probably just scratching on the surface.

I think you are right. On the surface this is a love of a girl lost, and how to deal with it, song

I think the great thing about these lyrics is that you may enjoy them on several levels. Because the words are formed as if they can take on many different meanings (they are evocative and allusive like an impressionistic painting). Here's one possible suggestion:

Have you experienced ANY longing slipping by and leaving you heartbroken? It doesn't have to be a girl. It could be a career and a way out of indignity and poverty, that you...

  • keeping this love as a positive dream "turn off the light and live in the moonlight shooting by" Or,
  • Letting the disappointment radicalize you as you "scare yourself (and others) to death in the dark" in order to achieve an even higher dream than the one you lost "to be where the angels fly" (and thus make you forget your pain)
  • Isn't what what radicals all over the world do to themselves and the rest of us? Scare us all to death because they let the hurt feelings from life's disappointments fuel an even more unlikely dream (paradise or heaven for me and the chosen few, or perhaps a drug-infused fantasy world that scares your family to death and destroy your own life..., or whatever your "being where the angels fly" drug might be

    @Loserido Interesting. Your interpretation reminds me of an old movie (late 70s/early 80s) that had Christopher Reeves playing one of the 2 lead roles. I think its called Somewhere in Time.