Leonard Cohen

Stories of the Street

Stories of the Street - meaning Summary

Urban Longing and Contradiction

Cohen's poem maps a restless urban consciousness torn between death and desire, intimacy and anonymity. Street scenes, military echoes, and domestic fantasies mix with religious and violent imagery to show a narrator seeking meaning amid modern fragmentation. He alternates longing for escape—farm life, tenderness—with stark acceptance of urban suffering. The final image of smallness beneath the stars and lost subway crowds emphasizes longing for connection in a fragmented world.

Read Complete Analyses

The stories of the street are mine, the Spanish voices laugh The Cadillacs go creeping now through the night and the poison gas And I lean from my window sill in this old hotel I chose Yes one hand on my suicide, one hand on the rose I know you've heard it's over now and war must surely come The cities they are broke in half and the middle men are gone But let me ask you one more time, O children of the dusk All these hunters who are shrieking now oh do they speak for us? And where do all these highways go, now that we are free? Why are the armies marching still that were coming home to me? O lady with your legs so fine, O stranger at your wheel You are locked into your suffering and your pleasures are the seal The age of lust is giving birth, and both the parents ask The nurse to tell them fairy tales on both sides of the glass And now the infant with his cord is hauled in like a kite And one eye filled with blueprints, one eye filled with night O come with me my little one, we will find that farm And grow us grass and apples there and keep all the animals warm And if by chance I wake at night and I ask you who I am O take me to the slaughterhouse, I will wait there with the lamb With one hand on the hexagram and one hand on the girl I balance on a wishing well that all men call the world We are so small between the stars, so large against the sky And lost among the subway crowds I try to catch your eye

default user
PoetryVerse just now

Feel free to be first to leave comment.

8/2200 - 0