Leonard Cohen — The Priest Says Goodbye

My love, the song is less than sung when with your lips you take it from my tongue -- nor can you seize this firm erotic grace and halt it tumbling into commonplace. No one I know can set the hook to fix lust in a longing look where we can read from time to time the absolute ballet our bodies mime. Harry can't, his face in Sally's crotch, nor Tom, who only loves when neighbours watch -- one mistakes the ballet for the chart, one hopes that gossip will perform like art. And what of art? When passion dies friendship hovers round our flesh like flies, and we name beautiful the smells that corpses give and immortelles. I have studied rivers: the waters rush like eternal fire in Moses' bush. Some things live with honour. I will see lust burn like fire in a holy tree. Do not come with me. When I stand alone my voice sings out as though I did not own my throat. Abelard proved how bright could be the bed between the hermitage and nunnery. You are beautiful. I will sing beside rivers where longing Hebrews cried. As separate exiles we can learn how desert trees ignite and branches burn. At certain crossroads we will win the harvest of our discipline. Swollen flesh, minds fed on wilderness -- O what a blaze of love our bodies press!


Other Leonard Cohen songs:
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