Kudos to The Reverend Morgan Allan for selecting the above ballad for the introduction to his lecture today comparing the horrors of the Marsten House in Stephen King's 'Salem's Lot to the beheading of John the Baptist as portrayed in the Gospel of Mark. [The video at the lecture link is muted during the first minute during the playing of the ballad, perhaps to avert copyright infringement]; here are the relevant lyrics in the hinge refrain, which can be heard in the embed:
It's knowing that this can't go on foreverLikely one of us will have to spend some days aloneMaybe we'll get forty years togetherBut one day I'll be goneOr one day you'll be gone.If we were vampires and death was a jokeWe'd go out on the sidewalk and smokeAnd laugh at all the lovers and their plansI wouldn't feel the need to hold your handMaybe time running out is a giftI'll work hard 'til the end of my shiftAnd give you every second I can findAnd hope it isn't me who's left behind...
The ballad by Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit is from his 2017 studio album "The Nashville Sound." The Reverend Morgan Allan's presentation (the second link above) is 45 minutes in length and contains several insights into Stephen King's writing that I think some readers here will appreciate. This is part of an ongoing series of lectures; the presentation last week focused on The Shining. Coming up: Cujo, The Dead Zone, Firestarter, Pet Sematary, and Thinner - all in the context of the Gospel of Mark.
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