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Authors: Christopher Ricks

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Love Songs in Age
is a poem that imagines songs within it, and shows us what this might mean, humanly. I don’t know of a counterpart to this in Dylan: that is, a song that imagines
poems within it, as against bearing them in mind. Poets like Verlaine and Rimbaud, Dylan is happy to acknowledge. But when it comes to Dylan and the sister-arts, it is, naturally, the traditional
sister-art of butter sculpture that most engages his interest, as does the traditional relation between the artist and his brother, the critic.

look you asshole – tho i might be nothing but

a butter sculptor, i refuse to go on working

with the idea of your praising as my reward –

like what are your credentials anyway? excpt for

talking about all us butter sculptors, what else

do you do? do you know what it feels like to

make some butter sculpture? do you know what

it feels like to actually ooze that butter around

& create something of fantastic worth? you said

that my last year’s work “The King’s Odor” was

great & then you say i havent done anything as

great since – just who the hell are you talking to

anyway? you must have something to do in your

real life – i understand that you praised the piece

you saw yesterday entitled “The Monkey Taster”

about which you said meant “a nice work of butter

carved into the shape of a young man who likes

only african women” you are an idiot – it doesnt

mean that at all . . . i hereby want nothing to do

with your hangups – i really dont care what you think

of my work as i now know you dont understand it

anyway . . . i must go now – i hve this new hunk of

margarine waiting in the bathtub – yes i said

MARGARINE & next week i just might decide to use

cream cheese –
40

But, butter sculpture apart, it is famously the art of film that Dylan most likes to stage or to screen within his songs. And the greatest of such is
Brownsville Girl
.
41
It starts Well.

Well, there was this movie I seen one time

About a man riding ’cross the desert and it starred Gregory Peck

He was shot down by a hungry kid trying to make a name for himself

The townspeople wanted to crush that kid down and string him up by the neck

I once tried to sum up why it earned its place among his Greatest Hits, third time around:

The end of an age, an age ago, ending “long before the stars were torn down”. At 11 minutes, it has world enough and time to be a love story, a trek, a brief epic .
. . Patience, it urges. We wait for eager ages for his voice to introduce us to the Brownsville Girl herself. Great rolling stanzas (“and it just comes a-rolling in”), and memories of
the Rolling Thunder Revue, especially since Sam Shepard plays his part. About films, it has the filmic flair of Dylan’s underrated masterpiece,
Renaldo and Clara
. Delicious yelps from
the back-up women, who sometimes comically refuse to back him up. He: “They can talk about me plenty when I’m gone.” They: “Oh yeah?” It moves, and yet stays put,
circling back round. One of those great
still
songs.
42

What particularly takes Dylan about films, I take it, is that they move – why else would they be movies? – while at the same time or in a
different sense they don’t. Don’t thereafter move from what they once were. For to film it is to fix it. And a re-make of a film is not the same thing as re-performing a song. Like
Brownsville Girl
, a film – including this one within the song that someone remembers or kinda remembers – moves and yet stays still. It stays more than just stills, that is true,
but to see it again is to see it exactly as it was, for all time. (Eternity is a different story.) There is comedy in
Brownsville Girl
’s beginning “Well, there was this movie I
seen one time”, for although “one time” makes perfectly good sense and we know what he means, it is going to be many more than one time that we shall hear tell of his seeing it.
The second time it goes, or rather, arrives, like this:

Something about that movie though, well I just can’t get it out of my head

But I can’t remember why I was in it or what part I was supposed to play

All I remember about it was Gregory Peck and the way people moved

And a lot of them seemed to be lookin’ my way

The way people moved, and meanwhile the film moved, and how they looked out my way from the screen as though I were the performer (no longer “a hungry kid trying to make a
name for himself ”), not – on this relief of an occasion – the performee. And yet the film, once and for all, is not going to move, or move out of my head. Even when an actor
returns in the re-make of a film, as did Robert Mitchum for the second
Cape Fear
, he is not himself or is not his previous self. One man in his time plays many parts. And so the song muses
on the Muse of Film:

Well, I’m standing in line in the rain to see a movie starring Gregory Peck

Yeah, but you know it’s not the one that I had in mind

He’s got a new one out now, I don’t even know what it’s about

But I’ll see him in anything so I’ll stand in line

A new one out now, the old one being in then, preserving its people, just as they were, for ever and a day. “Welcome to the land of the living dead.” Not just
The
Night of the Living Dead
, which is one particular film, but the land of the living dead, filmland. “I’ll stand in line”: much is made of lines in this song, the medium of song
being lines and it’s not being only Dylan’s audience that has to be willing to stand in line. Any song must. And Dylan
reels out the lines themselves, one of
the furthest extended being a line that does indeed find itself over the line (we forgive it its trespasses):

Now I’ve always been the kind of person that doesn’t like to trespass but sometimes you just find yourself over the line

And then, as the song winds to a conclusion, it winds back to the beginning, this time underlining “one time” with “twice”:

There was a movie I seen one time, I think I sat through it twice

I don’t remember who I was or where I was bound

All I remember about it was it starred Gregory Peck, he wore a gun and he was shot in the back

Seems like a long time ago, long before the stars were torn down

And so – in this requiem for the stars, the living dead – on to the refrain for the last time, a refrain that is a showing, or a plea for a showing:

Brownsville girl with your Brownsville curls

Teeth like pearls shining like the moon above

Brownsville girl, show me all around the world

Brownsville girl, you’re my honey love

Show me all around the world: that is all that any film asks.

There is in Dylan’s songs a sense that competition between sister-arts is as inevitable and (mostly) as unproductive as any other sibling rivalry, but that only a very touchy visual artist
would object to a singer’s envisaging the day
When I Paint My Masterpiece
. But there is (praise be) such a thing as stealthy competition.

Praise be to Nero’s Neptune

The Titanic sails at dawn

And everybody’s shouting

“Which Side Are You On?”

And Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot

Fighting in the captain’s tower

While calypso singers laugh at them

And fishermen hold flowers

Between the windows of the sea

Where lovely mermaids flow

And nobody has to think too much

About Desolation Row

There is some pitching of poems against songs here. The question “Which Side Are You On?” can be approached from many sides, one being the premiss that these words
will strike slightly differently upon the ear. For it is the case that not even Dylan can unmistakably sing the difference between upper and lower case (not “Which side are you on?”),
whereas to the eye the distinction is a Piece of Cake. It’s just that there is something that you need to know. The capital title of that unmisgiving political song.

So the central contention turns out not to be between those two heavyweight modernists, or between their high art and that of the lowly calypso, or between poems and songs, or even between the
Titanic
and the iceberg,
43
but between two deeply different apprehensions of what it
is that songs can most responsibly
be. And of what the world truly is, as against the simplicities of Once upon a time. “An I see two sides man” –

It was that easy –

“Which Side’re You On” aint phony words

An’ they aint from a phony song
44

Dylan didn’t like to bad-mouth a song that was in a good cause. But he knew, even back then in 1963, that this “two sides” business was averting its eyes and
its ears from too much. So before long he was hardening his art. “Songs like ‘Which Side Are You On?’ . . . they’re not folk-music songs; they’re political songs.
They’re
already
dead.”
45

What does the word protest mean to you?

“To me? Means uh . . . singing when I don’t really wanna sing.”

What?

“It means singing against your wishes to sing.”

Do you sing against your wishes to sing?

“No, no.”

Do you sing
protest
songs?

“No.”

What do you sing?

“I sing love songs.”
46

Love songs in age, as in youth.

Rhymes

“What is rhyme?” said the Professor. “Is it not an agreement of sound –?” “With a slight disagreement, yes” broke in Hanbury. “I
give up rhyme too.” “Let me however” said the Professor “in the moment of triumph insist on rhyme, which is a short and valuable instance of my principle. Rhyme is useful
not only as shewing the proportion of disagreement joined with agreement which the ear
finds most pleasurable, but also as marking the points in a work of art (each stanza
being considered as a work of art) where the principle of beauty is to be strongly marked, the intervals at which a combination of regularity with disagreement so very pronounced as rhyme may be
well asserted, the proportions which may be well borne by the more markedly, to the less markedly, structural. Do you understand?”

“Yes” said Middleton. “In fact it seems to me rhyme is the epitome of your principle. All beauty may by a metaphor be called rhyme, may it not?”

Gerard M. Hopkins (
On the Origin of Beauty: A Platonic Dialogue
)
47

Rhyme, in the words of
The Oxford English Dictionary
, is “Agreement in the terminal sounds of two or more words or metrical lines, such that (in English prosody)
the last stressed vowel and any sounds following it are the same, while the sound or sounds preceding are different. Examples:
which, rich; grew, too . . .

A device, a matter of technique, then, but always seeking a relation of rhyme to reason (without reason or rhyme?), so that “technique” ought to come to seem too small a word and we
will find ourselves thinking rather of a resource. Rhymes and rhythms and cadences will be what brings a poem home to us.

People have always complained that rhyme puts pressure on poets to say something other than what they really mean to say, and people have objected to Bob Dylan’s rhyming. Ellen Willis told
him off: “He relies too much on rhyme.”
48
It’s like some awful school report: you’re allowed to rely on rhyme 78 per cent, but
Master Dylan relies on rhyme 81 per cent. Anyway, you can’t rely too much on rhyme, though you can mistake unreliable rhymes for reliable ones.

For success, there is the simple (not easy) stroke that has the line, “Oh, Mama, can this really be the end?”, not as the end, but as nearing the end of each verse of
Stuck Inside
of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again
. And the rhyme in this refrain is beautifully metaphorical, because it’s a rhyme of the word “end” with the word
“again”:

Oh, Mama, can this really be the end

To be stuck inside of Mobile

With the Memphis Blues again?

“End” and “again” are metaphorically a rhyme because every rhyme is both an endness and an againness. That’s what a rhyme
is, intrinsically, a form of again (a gain, too), and a form of an ending.

In
Death is Not the End
, each verse ends:

Just remember that death is not the end

Not the end, not the end

Just remember that death is not the end

And the four verses at first maintain the tolling of this severe rhyme:
friend / mend, comprehend / bend, descend / lend
, and then at last soften it, though not much,
from an end rhyme into the assonance
men / citizen
. (Assonance differs from rhyme in not having the same
end
.) But just remember that the song has not only four verses but a bridge,
and that the bridge (a bridge to the next world) is variously at a great remove from the sound of that particular rhyming or assonance on
end
, having instead the sound-sequence that springs from
life: dies / bright light / shines / skies
:

Oh, the tree of life is growing

Where the spirit never dies

And the bright light of salvation shines

In dark and empty skies

The rhyme
dies / skies
depends upon its distance from the
end
sound, just as it depends upon “dies” being, in full, “never dies”. The
bridge is, then, at a great remove. And yet it is not complacently or utterly removed from the end-world, given the sound in “empty”.

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