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发表于 2018-5-24 08:59
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每一句歌词的意思
“How many roads must a man walk down6 T$ O% h, \8 ?% \2 I0 v$ I, V e
Before you call him a man?“6 B+ H1 \8 [. ] {8 U
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One interpretation of this line is that it refers to civil rights marches in the American South. Others have seen it more allegorically, like the following two lines. At what exact point in life is a boy now recognized as a man? Dylan uses roads as a metaphor for life experiences.
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- e* @' p) Q+ S; `/ L- o/ H“Yes, and how many seas must a white dove sail7 X! ^! V$ E" n5 ]: O7 o. E
Before she sleeps in the sand?”
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/ p1 G* \% l$ W& G, VDylan is using this as a metaphor for life, asking how much one must accomplish before they are content with having done enough, being able to finally rest. The words “a white dove” could also be used to denote peace, unity or harmony. There’s also the religious significance, ie the two white doves flying from Noah’s Ark across the flooded earth to see if there was any place in the world to land and rest& M t' k. u0 V- j
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"Yes, and how many times must the cannonballs fly/ z2 T* h9 {5 L. s8 G9 |7 a
Before they're forever banned?") C* }' f& p+ F( \2 Y1 c5 ~
a: x. }% c+ N9 s/ l8 IDylan thinks that cannonballs are a harm to mankind, and that banning it will bring more good than bad, as a conclusion, arms disrupt the peace in our lives.% Y0 a: D9 W+ {$ U0 d% }+ Z4 \
# ?9 i+ T2 r5 c3 c L4 n"The answer, my friend, is blowing in the wind2 V9 i; o% f! g# d7 r1 E2 R( R" u- i
The answer is blowing in the wind"3 L' X3 {# c0 k, k2 K: M
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The questions posed within the song have answers; they’re out there, but we have yet to find them.
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0 s! Z& V- l0 M' a0 X+ `The theme, “Blowin' in the Wind” is taken from a passage in Woody Guthrie’s autobiography, Bound for Glory, where Guthrie compares his political sensibilities to newspapers blowing in the winds of New York City. Dylan said that reading the book was a turning point in his political thinking.
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4 p; T* m% i- X/ APete Seeger was the first to identify the melody of “Blowin' in the Wind” as Dylan’s adaptation of an old Negro spiritual, “No More Auction Block”.
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That song originated in Canada and was sung by former slaves who fled there after Britain abolished slavery in 1833. Dylan acknowledged the source when he told journalist Marc Rowland: “‘Blowin in the Wind’ has always been a spiritual. I took it off a song called ‘No More Auction Block’ – that’s a spiritual, and ‘Blowin’ in the Wind' follows the same feeling.”
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