Bob Dylan and US History part 13

by Larry Fyffe
Post-Modernism leaves lots of room in a work of art for a reader/listener/observer to interpret the meaning therein on his or her own. Of course, the interpretation has to be plausible:
(C)ould you tell me what happened to  
 julius larossa?" a picture of abraham lincoln 
falls from the ceiling "that guy looks like a girl"

(Bob Dylan: Tarantula)
Julius Larossa appears on television and radio, sings traditional sentimental love songs; he’s mocked above by both the narrator and by Civil War President Abraham Lincoln:
Sometimes the world is a valley of heartaches and tears
And in the hustle and bustle, no sunshine appears
But you and I have our love always there to remind us
There is a way we can leave all the shadows behind us
Volara oh, oh

(Julius Larossa: Volara ~  Modugno/Migliacci/Parish)

 "Volara" means "fly away".
The following song takes a more middle-of-the-road approach than “Volara”; the meaning is rather clear, which one seldom finds in “Tarantula”.
That is ~ Love doesn’t always leave dark shadows behind :
Bird on the horizon, sitting on the fence
He's singing his song for me
At his own expense
And I'm just like that bird
Oh, singing just for you
I hope that you can hear me
Hear me singing through these tears

Presto! there’s a unity that can be uncovered between Bob Dylan songs and his booklet “Tarantula”:

(B)ut I asked him anyway
"What ever happened to gregory corso?"
(Bob Dylan: Tarantula)
Below, a “strange-love” satirical poem from one of the Beat Boys:
I heard the sound of thunder
It roared out a warning
Heard the roar of a wave
That could drown the whole world
(Bob Dylan: A Hard's A-Gonna Fall)
And a rather humorous bit about the possibility of the end-of-individualism:
(M)y mind is running down the river
- i'd sell my soul to the elephant
- i'd cheat the sphinx
- i'd lie to the conqueror
(Bob Dylan: Tarantula)
The elephant is the icon of the American Republican Party; the riddle of the Sphinx solved correctly stops Oedipus from getting eaten by the female monster: “What has four feet in the morning, two at noon, and three in the evening?”; ‘William the Conqueror invaded England.
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