Stoned Immaculate
Jim Morrison Lyrics


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I'll tell you this
No eternal reward will forgive us now
For wasting the dawn.

Back in those days everything was simpler and more confused
One summer night, going to the pier
I ran into two young girls
The blonde one was called Freedom
The dark one, Enterprise
We talked and they told me this story
Now listen to this
I'll tell you about Texas radio and the big beat
Soft driven, slow and mad

Reaching your head with the cold, sudden fury of a divine messenger
Let me tell you about heartache and the loss of god
Wandering, wandering in hopeless night
Out here in the perimeter there are no stars




Out here we is stoned
Immaculate.

Overall Meaning

Jim Morrison's Stoned Immaculate is a surreal, psychedelic poem with multiple interpretations. The first line of the verse, "No eternal reward will forgive us now," is a warning, a realization that we have wasted time and sunshine, a clear reference to the hippie generation. Morrison believes that there is no redemption, no reward that can atone for squandering the dawn. He is alluding to the fact that the sixties' youth didn't seem to care about the consequences of their actions or that the universe offered them an endless supply of time.


Morrison then goes on to describe a chance encounter on a summer night with two women, Freedom and Enterprise. He recounts the story that they told him, one of which is about a radio station in Texas, and the big beat that it played. He describes the soft-driven, slow, and mad sound that reaches one's head with the sudden fury of a divine messenger. The song is about heartache and the loss of God, while wandering in hopeless night, where there are no stars, out here in the perimeter. The last line, "Out here we is stoned, immaculate," seems to suggest that the singer has found a sense of purpose in the midst of chaos, and it likely characterizes the singer's mindset at the moment, rather than a state of continual being.


Line by Line Meaning

I'll tell you this
Listen up, pay attention


No eternal reward will forgive us now
There will be no forgiveness for our actions


For wasting the dawn.
We have wasted time that cannot be regained


Back in those days everything was simpler and more confused
The past was both simpler and more complicated than the present


One summer night, going to the pier
On a summer night while walking to the pier


I ran into two young girls
I came across two young women


The blonde one was called Freedom
One was named Freedom and had blonde hair


The dark one, Enterprise
The other was named Enterprise and had dark hair


We talked and they told me this story
We conversed as they recounted a tale to me


Now listen to this
Pay attention to what I'm about to say


I'll tell you about Texas radio and the big beat
I'm going to inform you about Texas radio and its big sound


Soft driven, slow and mad
A smooth, leisurely tune with a slightly crazy edge


Reaching your head with the cold, sudden fury of a divine messenger
This music will hit you with a powerful and unexpected force


Let me tell you about heartache and the loss of god
I want to share with you the pain of heartbreak and the absence of a divine being


Wandering, wandering in hopeless night
Feeling lost and aimless in the dark of night


Out here in the perimeter there are no stars
Beyond the boundaries, there is darkness and emptiness


Out here we is stoned
We are in an altered state of consciousness


Immaculate.
But despite this altered state, we are pure and perfect




Lyrics © Wixen Music Publishing
Written by: JIM MORRISON, JOHN PAUL DENSMORE, RAYMOND D MANZAREK, ROBERT A KRIEGER

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Most interesting comment from YouTube:

Agnimitro Ghosh

The poem is all about the journey from childhood to youth, and then about how life is.

'For wasting the dawn'
Dawn here refers to the time between adolescence and youth, a connection between night and day.
'No eternal reward...'
No reward waits for us, when we get older, to supplement us. Out of the warm shelter of our parents, we emerge, into the raw, cruel world.
'Back in those days...confused'
We know that about the bridge which connects childhood and youth, don't we?
'One summer night, going to the pier,'
'Pier' is the bridge connecting the childhood from youth.
'I ran into two young girls.
The blonde was called Freedom,
The dark one, Enterprise.'
Now, youth offers us Freedom. 'Ran into' is important, because, it expresses really well how suddenly the freedom comes.
'Enterprise' can mean a lot of things. It can be a relationship, or a pursuit of a dream.
And now, the two girls, the poetic expression of youth tell a story. A story about life. Now this poetically means that the writer is going through his life, a story.
''Now listen to this,
I'll tell you about Texas Radio and the Big Beat.
Soft driven slow and mad,
Like some new language.''
Life. A new language. In the sixties, the radio around Texas used to be from Mexico. You can't understand the lyrics, but the language. It might seem like a blabber, but poetically, its a great paragraph.
"Reaching your head
With the cold, sudden fury
Of a divine messenger."
Life does that. Some things can't be interpreted, but felt.
"Let me tell you about heartache
And the loss of god."
The 'g' of 'god' is not in caps. 'Loss of God' is the loss of faith in God.

"Wandering, wandering in hopeless night
Out here in the perimeter there are no stars"
Poetical expression. Hard to define.
Life becomes hopeless at times. 'no stars' stars are expression for, again, hope.

"Out here we is stoned
Immaculate."

Out of all the fuss of life, 'we'(the past and present of the poet) is(used to describe 'we' is one person) is stoned clean.
Stoned Immaculate(immaculate means clean, pure).



All comments from YouTube:

Teerboyd

“Out here we is stoned, immaculate “

That has to be one of the coldest lines in music history

Beatnikzombie

Every time I lose my mind, I have a greater grasp of reality. It's nice to find someone who gets that. I sure do miss Jim.

Nellie Vaughn

That opening line is a punch to the gut, man.

Mamanda Panda

Especially now.

toniquix

Hello to all the fellow Doors fans ,is this not the best music ever created? cheers my friends ,I embrace you all.

TheDanielVFlores

+toniquix best music ever created by the doors?

Pratyush Purohit

toniquix I love you to man..all my brothers and sisters who preach The Doors

Libertarian FreeMan

Cheers 🍻!

Kelli Michelle

Yes, yes, yes

Mark Harrison

Me and my friends, after the pub we'd sit in my friends car windows shut smoking weed listening to this. It takes me back to those days.

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