"red eyes" + "swill" = liquor
"familiar swine" = people you don't know or like, but understand because you're all there for the same reason
So they met at a bar, and got along well immediately. Then the chemistry sets our protagonist daydreaming.
Hallmarks of daydreams that show up here:
Idealization: Setting her up as an Isis, "she's gonna save me".
Shifting desires: "Soothe me daily" turns into the "better yet" of "she wouldn't care". You also get phrases like "it'd be great" when he finally pegs what he'd like to do with her most.
Projecting one's own interests and experience: He imagines raising his kids with her the same way he was raised.
Fantastical and unrealistic activities: Stealing cars and becoming detectives. Not gonna happen.
The grammar itself points to the relationship being less-real than the previous and later verses, because it's conveyed purely in future tenses, whereas the song both begins and ends in present tense. That combined with the content being characteristic of a baseless, shifting fantasy clinches it for me.
When he is "cut clean from the dream" of "that night" he looks around to find her gone in the time it took him to smoke a cigarette. There's a lovely implication that it was his own inattentiveness that led to her going away. She both "[blew] in out of nowhere" and went away when he wasn't looking. He was only really present during those moments in which she was laughing through his disguises.
Really nice lyric. Very Tom Waits for the narrative.
But wait, there's more!
There are loads of Isis and Osiris references in this. It's not just the name getting thrown in for idealization's sake.
Relevant parts of the myth:
Osiris was killed, cut into hundreds of tiny pieces, and buried in that many spots all across Egypt. Subsequently Isis, his wife, grieved for him while scouring all of Egypt for the pieces. She found all of them (and in some tellings, magically created one special bit), reassembled him, and breathed life back into him. Osiris is changed by this to different degrees in every telling. Despite being brought back to life, he cannot return to his former life and activities.
A failed version of the same story is laced the whole way through this lyric. All you have to do is trace what happens to the "versions of [him]" that are repeatedly referenced.
In the beginning he's left with only a pathetic version of him: the drunkard "soul-deep" in booze. He doesn't have the energy to "pretend" to be anything else.
Then the goddess appears and gives him another option, a self he'd "rather" be: a lover.
Excited daydreaming leads into the fantasy itself resolving in escapism. Rather than anything exciting, he settles on withdrawing from the world and getting high together as the thing that'd be "great".
("Growing black irises" I'm taking as a reference to hallucinogens or pot. Regardless, the resolution of a really exciting! energy-filled! love story into wanting to lie back and watch the world burn is undeniable escapism, whether drugs are involved or not.)
While they're indulging in this shared act of escaping the world, "every version" of him is "dead and buried in the yard outside". The implication is repeating the narrative from the bar: He's killing himself, destroying who he is, and not letting himself engage with the world through his attachment to dreams and escapism.
But with her, that'd be okay. She can go around digging up his pieces and putting him back together every time. She can pull him into the world and make him live again.
But then he sees she's gone, the dream stops, and he has to work to try to dig up his own pieces. If he doesn't, he'll never connect with anyone well enough to be saved. Kinda like what we just saw an example of.
I wanted this song to be as happy as it sounds. A silly little love story. Then I read the lyric, and all I could say was, "Well, that's fucking depressing."
@teaspill Thaaaaat's Hozier! The depressing is always underneath . . . Someday I hope he'll explain the appeal of the Isis-Oriris story to him, given that it's the only interpretation I can come up with for Run.
@teaspill Thaaaaat's Hozier! The depressing is always underneath . . . Someday I hope he'll explain the appeal of the Isis-Oriris story to him, given that it's the only interpretation I can come up with for Run.
@marycb Ran into a Hozier quote yesterday and thought of you.
@marycb Ran into a Hozier quote yesterday and thought of you.
"I found the experience of falling in love or being in love was a death, a death of everything. You kind of watch yourself die in a wonderful way, and you experience for the briefest moment โ if you see yourself for a moment through their eyes โ everything you believed about yourself gone. In a death-and-rebirth sense."
"I found the experience of falling in love or being in love was a death, a death of everything. You kind of watch yourself die in a wonderful way, and you experience for the briefest moment โ if you see yourself for a moment through their eyes โ everything you believed about yourself gone. In a death-and-rebirth sense."
@teaspill Lol, I also think all of Hozier's lyrics are very depressing. He writes in the most realistic way, not sugar-coating anything. Your explanation is very nice and in-depth. Thanks. :)
@teaspill Lol, I also think all of Hozier's lyrics are very depressing. He writes in the most realistic way, not sugar-coating anything. Your explanation is very nice and in-depth. Thanks. :)
@teaspill I agree with much of what you have said however, I totally think you missed the mark on the symbolism involving the black irises. The Iris, meaning rainbow and named after the Greek Goddess, has multiple meanings that have been attached to it through the ages. The most likely reference in this case is the Egyptian symbolism attached to the flower (with the references to Isis and Osiris present in the song.) They believed the flower represented life and resurrection from death, physical and spiritual. This fits perfectly with the song's lyrics and the Isis/Osiris mythology.
@teaspill I agree with much of what you have said however, I totally think you missed the mark on the symbolism involving the black irises. The Iris, meaning rainbow and named after the Greek Goddess, has multiple meanings that have been attached to it through the ages. The most likely reference in this case is the Egyptian symbolism attached to the flower (with the references to Isis and Osiris present in the song.) They believed the flower represented life and resurrection from death, physical and spiritual. This fits perfectly with the song's lyrics and the Isis/Osiris mythology.
Thanks for this. I think this has become just about my favorite song on the album. Aside from the Osiris myth (to which I've already admitted my ignorance) I'm just knocked out by the way he expresses things so clearly. The fact that it so neatly ties into something more increases my admiration.
Thanks for this. I think this has become just about my favorite song on the album. Aside from the Osiris myth (to which I've already admitted my ignorance) I'm just knocked out by the way he expresses things so clearly. The fact that it so neatly ties into something more increases my admiration.
I don't think this fling ever got off the ground.
"red eyes" + "swill" = liquor "familiar swine" = people you don't know or like, but understand because you're all there for the same reason
So they met at a bar, and got along well immediately. Then the chemistry sets our protagonist daydreaming.
Hallmarks of daydreams that show up here: Idealization: Setting her up as an Isis, "she's gonna save me". Shifting desires: "Soothe me daily" turns into the "better yet" of "she wouldn't care". You also get phrases like "it'd be great" when he finally pegs what he'd like to do with her most. Projecting one's own interests and experience: He imagines raising his kids with her the same way he was raised. Fantastical and unrealistic activities: Stealing cars and becoming detectives. Not gonna happen.
The grammar itself points to the relationship being less-real than the previous and later verses, because it's conveyed purely in future tenses, whereas the song both begins and ends in present tense. That combined with the content being characteristic of a baseless, shifting fantasy clinches it for me.
When he is "cut clean from the dream" of "that night" he looks around to find her gone in the time it took him to smoke a cigarette. There's a lovely implication that it was his own inattentiveness that led to her going away. She both "[blew] in out of nowhere" and went away when he wasn't looking. He was only really present during those moments in which she was laughing through his disguises.
Really nice lyric. Very Tom Waits for the narrative.
But wait, there's more!
There are loads of Isis and Osiris references in this. It's not just the name getting thrown in for idealization's sake.
Relevant parts of the myth:
Osiris was killed, cut into hundreds of tiny pieces, and buried in that many spots all across Egypt. Subsequently Isis, his wife, grieved for him while scouring all of Egypt for the pieces. She found all of them (and in some tellings, magically created one special bit), reassembled him, and breathed life back into him. Osiris is changed by this to different degrees in every telling. Despite being brought back to life, he cannot return to his former life and activities.
A failed version of the same story is laced the whole way through this lyric. All you have to do is trace what happens to the "versions of [him]" that are repeatedly referenced.
In the beginning he's left with only a pathetic version of him: the drunkard "soul-deep" in booze. He doesn't have the energy to "pretend" to be anything else.
Then the goddess appears and gives him another option, a self he'd "rather" be: a lover.
Excited daydreaming leads into the fantasy itself resolving in escapism. Rather than anything exciting, he settles on withdrawing from the world and getting high together as the thing that'd be "great". ("Growing black irises" I'm taking as a reference to hallucinogens or pot. Regardless, the resolution of a really exciting! energy-filled! love story into wanting to lie back and watch the world burn is undeniable escapism, whether drugs are involved or not.)
While they're indulging in this shared act of escaping the world, "every version" of him is "dead and buried in the yard outside". The implication is repeating the narrative from the bar: He's killing himself, destroying who he is, and not letting himself engage with the world through his attachment to dreams and escapism. But with her, that'd be okay. She can go around digging up his pieces and putting him back together every time. She can pull him into the world and make him live again.
But then he sees she's gone, the dream stops, and he has to work to try to dig up his own pieces. If he doesn't, he'll never connect with anyone well enough to be saved. Kinda like what we just saw an example of.
I wanted this song to be as happy as it sounds. A silly little love story. Then I read the lyric, and all I could say was, "Well, that's fucking depressing."
@teaspill Thaaaaat's Hozier! The depressing is always underneath . . . Someday I hope he'll explain the appeal of the Isis-Oriris story to him, given that it's the only interpretation I can come up with for Run.
@teaspill Thaaaaat's Hozier! The depressing is always underneath . . . Someday I hope he'll explain the appeal of the Isis-Oriris story to him, given that it's the only interpretation I can come up with for Run.
@marycb Ran into a Hozier quote yesterday and thought of you.
@marycb Ran into a Hozier quote yesterday and thought of you.
"I found the experience of falling in love or being in love was a death, a death of everything. You kind of watch yourself die in a wonderful way, and you experience for the briefest moment โ if you see yourself for a moment through their eyes โ everything you believed about yourself gone. In a death-and-rebirth sense."
"I found the experience of falling in love or being in love was a death, a death of everything. You kind of watch yourself die in a wonderful way, and you experience for the briefest moment โ if you see yourself for a moment through their eyes โ everything you believed about yourself gone. In a death-and-rebirth sense."
@teaspill Lol, I also think all of Hozier's lyrics are very depressing. He writes in the most realistic way, not sugar-coating anything. Your explanation is very nice and in-depth. Thanks. :)
@teaspill Lol, I also think all of Hozier's lyrics are very depressing. He writes in the most realistic way, not sugar-coating anything. Your explanation is very nice and in-depth. Thanks. :)
@teaspill I agree with much of what you have said however, I totally think you missed the mark on the symbolism involving the black irises. The Iris, meaning rainbow and named after the Greek Goddess, has multiple meanings that have been attached to it through the ages. The most likely reference in this case is the Egyptian symbolism attached to the flower (with the references to Isis and Osiris present in the song.) They believed the flower represented life and resurrection from death, physical and spiritual. This fits perfectly with the song's lyrics and the Isis/Osiris mythology.
@teaspill I agree with much of what you have said however, I totally think you missed the mark on the symbolism involving the black irises. The Iris, meaning rainbow and named after the Greek Goddess, has multiple meanings that have been attached to it through the ages. The most likely reference in this case is the Egyptian symbolism attached to the flower (with the references to Isis and Osiris present in the song.) They believed the flower represented life and resurrection from death, physical and spiritual. This fits perfectly with the song's lyrics and the Isis/Osiris mythology.
@mrjoejangles Yup. Found that out later, facepalmed, wished I could edit these. Thanks for commenting about it. :)
@mrjoejangles Yup. Found that out later, facepalmed, wished I could edit these. Thanks for commenting about it. :)
@teaspill
@teaspill
Thanks for this. I think this has become just about my favorite song on the album. Aside from the Osiris myth (to which I've already admitted my ignorance) I'm just knocked out by the way he expresses things so clearly. The fact that it so neatly ties into something more increases my admiration.
Thanks for this. I think this has become just about my favorite song on the album. Aside from the Osiris myth (to which I've already admitted my ignorance) I'm just knocked out by the way he expresses things so clearly. The fact that it so neatly ties into something more increases my admiration.