Preview

“Cage the Elephant – Ain’t No Rest for the Wicked” Lyrics Analysis

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
912 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
“Cage the Elephant – Ain’t No Rest for the Wicked” Lyrics Analysis
Chayan Warde
Ms. McCormick
English II Honors
March 24, 2013
“Cage the Elephant – Ain’t no rest for the wicked” lyrics analysis
As the title and chorus of this song dictate, there is no rest for the wicked; this song can contain many different interpretations according to different ages, maturity, and general knowledge. This song represents the fact that everyone has a wickedness within themselves, and when the song says, “Oh, there ain’t no rest for the wicked, Money don’t grow on trees” (lines 13-14), the singer states that everyone has a degree to a level of greed. There is a constant need for money, and that money is not easily found. The song goes to show how desperate a man or woman could be in the current American economy, from prostitution, murder threats, or even robbery just to get enough money to support themselves/their family. In modern times, money equals power, and those who have no money have no power. While being penniless you cannot live a peaceful life and you will most likely live a poor life of constant bankruptcy. This is the reason the singer sings of the hard times many go through, to get their word out or, to simply let others know. This song, as a whole, symbolizes the poor and the justifications of their crimes, while also showing this through the singer’s perspective as an average person who knows nothing of the world of the poor.
The first stanza introduces a woman who approaches the narrator and tries to have him buy a pleasurable time for the evening. Prostitution is a disgusting form of love, where the man pays the women to please the man, when usually neither is truly having a pleasant time. It is common where men are not satisfied in their love life, and women need money to survive on their own. Therefore, in response to the women’s request the singer says, “I said you’re such a sweet young thing, oh why you do this to yourself,” (10-11). It would be common for anyone to ignore another, but the singer confronts this women and

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    * shut up — among the harshest language on the entire album! Usually the Hip will give David Mamet a run for his money when it comes to coarse language; perhaps the Hip are mellowing after 12 albums.…

    • 760 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    This Song relates to Romeo and Juliet , after Romeo killed Tybalt, who was Juliet's cousin. The reason he killed him , because Tybalt killed Mercutio, who was Romeo’s best friend. After Tybalt was killed the prince came and people told on Romeo. Romeo then went to Friar Lawrence house on some advice on what he just did. Then the nurse came and told Romeo that he wife was in a suicidal mind “Oh, she says nothing,sir;just weeps and weeps.” The song is relating to someone trying to get to their and that , that person is taking their breath away. Meaning that person is trying so hard for them that it’s taking their breath away.…

    • 116 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    I’d tumbled off the freight in the jungle by Deptford and found a fire and seven fellows around it, and they had stew – somebody’d got a rabbit and it was in a pail over the fire with some carrots. Ever eat that? It’s awful, but I wanted some, and after a lot of nastiness they said I could have some after they’d had what they wanted of me. My manhood just couldn’t stand it, and I left them. They laughed at me and said I’d be back when I got good and hungry. Then I met this woman, wandering by herself. I knew she was a town woman. Women tramps are very rare; too much sense, I guess. She was clean and looked like an angel to me, but I threatened her and asked her for money. She hadn’t any; then I grabbed her. She wasn’t much afraid and asked what I wanted. I told her in tramp’s language, and I could see she didn’t understand, but when I started to push her down and grab at her clothes she said, ‘Why are you so rough?’ and then I started to cry. She held my head to her breast and talked nicely to me, and I cried worse, but the strange thing is I still wanted her. As if only that would put me right, you see? That’s what I said to her. And do you know what she said? She said ‘You may if you promise not to be rough.’ So I did, and that was when you people came hunting her. When I look back now, it’s a wonder that it wasn’t all over with me that moment. But it wasn’t. No, it was glory come into my life. It was as if I had gone right into Hell…

    • 1024 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In "Countess P's Advice for New Girls" by Natasha Tretheway from the book Bellocq's Ophelia, the author characterizes herself as a whore named Ophelia who works in a whorehouse in Storyville, New Orleans. In the poem, Countess P. was the madam of the whorehouse in which Ophelia worked and was explaining to her how to act around the men that would come to use the service provided. It contains 7 stanzas that were made up of tercets and each line was approximately 10 syllables. The author uses literary elements such as similes and important line breaks to catch the attention of the reader and make it seem like she really is the character in the poem. Among the poems we read using this theme, this poem had a quiet, subtle and calm tone.…

    • 902 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    From Eden Poem Analysis

    • 1070 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Hozier seamlessly ties in repetition and parallelism to simplify the message he is attempting to communicate. The main part of the song in which the listener can easily detect parallelism is in the third stanza: “No tired sighs, no rolling eyes, no irony/ no ‘who cares’, no vacant stares, no time for me” (7-8). Here, the word “no” is repeated to further emphasize the fact that the artist does not want to have to deal with these signs of hardship in his relationship with this new woman. Another example of repetition is Hozier’s use of the word “babe.” “Babe” is repeated in the song a total of four times. At plain sight it can be seen simply as filler word; however, the placement of the word reveals a deeper reason for its inclusion. Hozier deliberately only uses the word “babe” to start lines in which he says something negative about the relationship. The song begins with, “Babe, there’s something tragic about you” (1). Aforementioned, this line has a negative connotation to it despite beginning with a word of adoration. This creates contradiction in his writing. Another instance in which this is used is in line 13 with, “Babe, there’s something wretched about this,” where the same explanation applies. By following “babe” with these negative descriptions, Hozier…

    • 1070 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The narrator introduces herself as a “cottage maiden”, she is seen as humbling herself and through this first line we see her as a meek character. This meek character contrasts to the anger and jealousy we see from the narrator later in the poem. “Not mindful was I fair”, this also shows her as meek and uncaring of her looks. The repetition of “Why did a great lord find me out?” exemplifies the narrator’s annoyance and regret of her meeting with this great lord. The great lord “filled her heart with care” this shows that in contrast to her uncaring attitude towards her looks previously, this lord has now made her notice her looks and become mindful of them.…

    • 635 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    She is displayed as a bitter, hateful character who seeks revenge, shown with ‘not a day since then I haven’t wished him dead’ and ‘give me a male corpse for a long slow honeymoon’. This is almost contrasted with her loneliness and sexual frustration explored in the first stanza, with ‘some nights better, the lost body over me, my fluent tongue in it’s mouth in it’s ear then down till I suddenly bite awake.’…

    • 1243 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The setting in The Child by Tiger illustrates the moral and mental challenges that Dick goes through. Ashville, North Carolina around 1912 was heavily racist based, but Dick was actually treated a little better until he went on a killing spree. Dick had most people's trust and even played with white kids while he was young. Since this story is set post civil war era and pre Civil Rights Movement there were a lot of restrictions and wrong doings that happened to African Americans. Considering what town it is set in the idea of a lynch mob is not farfetched and law enforcement essentially encouraged them.…

    • 258 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    This allowed a new category of women to emerge. In addition to the “promiscuous” or “domestic” woman, “Charity girls” were respectable working women who also engaged in sexual activity. Men would “treat” working women to drinks and other forms of entertainment, often in exchange for sexual favours6. Women who engaged in this type of activity too often would be criticized for being promiscuous, but in many cases it was necessary for them to survive. Women were still dependent on men for economic support because they were considered “second class” wage earners7. This is further evidenced by department store managers encouraging women to supplement their wages by finding a “gentleman friend”8. Therefore, it is clear that women could not financially support themselves and often turned to men for assistance. This further emphasizes the double standard, as women were required to maintain a balance between working respectability and being perceived as immoral. Men in the song are described as “villains”, which indicates a particular stance the song takes on working women and their relationships with men. Attempting to maintain this double standard would often place a woman’s good reputation in jeopardy, and many women rejected pleasure in favor of her own morality for this…

    • 979 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the second stanza he reminds her that he can’t do all this praising because “times winged chariot” is “hurrying near.” Here the chariot is the Greek god Helios which has been personified as the sun. He says that time is catching up with them and it’ll soon be the end. He then uses death to show the lover the pointlessness of resisting him. He says once dead “then worms shall try that long preserved virginity.” This is used to encourage his lover to give her virginity to him rather than saving it…

    • 571 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    "50-50" by Langston Hughes

    • 1186 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The first stanza shows her loneliness when she states “I’m all alone in this world, she said “ / “Ain’t got nobody to share my bed” (1-2). She is a woman with a desire to be in love, and maybe start a family, but first she needs a man in her life. She has nobody to share her bed, means she is an unmarried woman, with no boyfriend or significant other. Her first desire is having someone to share her bed, which makes her seem desperate for a man. She is looking for someone to be her companion. She continues, “Ain’t got nobody to hold my hand— “/ “The truth of the matter’s “/ “I ain’t got no man.” (3-5)…

    • 1186 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Barbie Doll Marge Piercy

    • 1709 Words
    • 7 Pages

    The opening stanza describes how according to society any “girl-child” spends her childhood. It sets the tone with a happy beginning and a positive attitude. She is presented with “dolls that did pee-pee” (2), "miniature GE stoves and irons," as well as "wee lipsticks" (3-4). These items are not only gifts that a young girl would like to have but are…

    • 1709 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Harlem Dancer

    • 397 Words
    • 2 Pages

    First, McKay describes her voice as “sound of blended flutes blown by black players upon a picnic day” (McKay line 3). As a popular instrument at formal situation, flute clearly not belongs to the filthy night club where young prostitutes watch half-clothed body sway (Line 2). They do not listen to the singing nor focus on the dancer’s dancing skills; instead they watch the naked body sway. Her voice is not just any blend of flutes. It is the sound upon a picnic day, which is a symbol of freshness and energy. Here, the dancer is not blending into the obscene around her. She is elegant and decent despite her behavior. The fact that the flutes are blown by black players shows that the dancing girl is probably an African American. So she probably had experienced severe discrimination and prejudgment in the past, and this can be understood as her wounds.…

    • 397 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He is not interested in having an intercourse with women because he thinks that it would rob him of his masculinity. Furthermore, he does not want to give sexual pleasure to his major enemies, women, since “they are the ones – by a long shot – who gain on the deal” (1001). His dealings with prostitutes are very awkward and for the prostitutes rather mortifying. He orders them to parade around stripped and claims, “Nothing annoys women more than walking when they’re naked” (1002). The reason why he shames prostitutes is that their humiliation skyrockets his confidence and superiority and gives him a great sexual satisfaction. After he leaves the hotel room where he spends time alone with the prostitute, Renée, he feels a great deal of malicious achievement because of his ability to astonish her as he claims that “it isn’t easy to surprise a whore” (1003). This also contributes to the empowerment of his ego, and consequently transforms his inferiority to a sense of…

    • 1009 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ballad Love Annotated

    • 1123 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The poem, Ballad, looks to view love in a very negative and cynical way, as this seems to be a classic tale of a man who manipulates a woman. The poem starts off with a 'faithless shepherd' who 'courted' a young girl. At this point, we are not made aware of the girl's name. Slightly later, in the opening stanza, we are told about how the shepherd 'stole away' her 'liberty when my poor heart was strange to men', and she clarifies this again on the next line, once again by saying 'He came and smiled and stole it then', we begin to get a feel that the poet is trying to convey how powerful love can be, as the shepherd manipulates the girl, who simply agrees to everything the shepherd desires.…

    • 1123 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays