appleplex wrote:
'cymbaline' isn't a word, but Cymbeline was a mythical British king and a slightly bizarre late Shakespeare play about said king. Though I agree with the above poster - there's definitely a 'g' there so 'cymbal ring' seems the only feasible suggestion.
Re. This Dream of You, I thought the slightly Delphic second verse sounded faintly Biblical. It can be traced to the Pauline proclamation in Corinthians about being renewed 'in Christ':
This Dream of You
There's a moment when all old things become new again
But that moment might have come and gone
All I have and all I know is this dream of you which keeps me living on
cf. Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new. (2 Corinthian 5:17 King James Version)
An interesting disavowal of the idea of Christian renewal - being renewed or 'born again' in Christ. Assuming it's an allusion rather than merely a borrowing (i.e. calling into play the prior text, rather than just stealing phrases from it, as has been predominantly the case on his last four studio albums), it puts paid to the preposterously selective readings of Dylan's recent love songs as coded songs addressed to Christ, along the lines of: if you replace the word 'baby' with 'Jesus,' then ta dah!, Make You Feel My Love' goes from risible schmaltz to profound theological meditation. Not that such flimsy readings stand up on their own in any case.
Wow, what an absolutely fantastic post! I've often bristled at the suggestion that any number of Dylan's songs are veiled "paeans to the lord," so I just wanted you to know that I appreciate your incisive musings!
A further revision to the It's All Good line: it's actually "The widows cry / the orphans
plead." I'll second the "throw on the dirt / Pile on the dust" interpretation, since I previously hadn't realized that people were somehow hearing "dust" twice (?!).
This thread, coupled with the preponderance off-the-mark transcriptions that have littered the web this month, really make me wonder about the state of some people's ears and minds. Holy smokes.