About the song
Background
- Original Poem: “A Feast of Friends” started as a poem by Jim Morrison but was never published within his official poetry collections.
- An American Prayer: This piece was posthumously included on the 1978 album “An American Prayer.” The Doors set music to Morrison’s spoken-word performance of the poem.
- Controversy: Some fans believe “A Feast of Friends” was originally titled “The Severed Garden” and that the title and musical arrangement were handled by the remaining Doors members without Morrison’s input. Others maintain the title has always been “A Feast of Friends.”
Lyrics
A portion of the lyrics is below. You can find the full text on lyric sites:
Wow, I’m sick of doubt Live in the light of certain South Cruel bindings The servants have the power … I will not go Prefer a Feast of Friends To the Giant Family
Themes
- Dissatisfaction with the Mundane: Morrison expresses fatigue with doubt and a yearning for a more certain, fulfilling existence. He critiques societal power structures (“servants have the power”).
- Mortality and Transformation: References to death and a “severed garden” abound. Morrison seems to find death fascinating while acknowledging its inevitability.
- Rejection of Tradition: Morrison speaks against a “Giant Family,” possibly symbolizing traditional values or social order. He prefers the intimacy of “a Feast of Friends.”
- Existentialism: The poem reflects the loneliness and searching often found in existentialist works. Morrison seeks meaning and authenticity in a world he sees as empty.
Additional Notes
The lyrics are dense with imagery and open to interpretation. Fans continue to analyze and debate the poem’s precise meaning. That mysterious quality has made it one of Morrison’s most enduring works.
Video
Lyrics
Wow, I’m sick of doubt
Live in the light of certain south Cruel bindings The servants have the power Dog-men and their mean women Pulling poor blankets over our sailorsI’m sick of dour faces
Staring at me from the TV tower I want roses in my garden bower Dig?Royal babies, rubies
Must now replace aborted strangers in the mud These mutants, blood-meal for the plant that’s plowedThey are waiting to take us into the severed garden
Do you know how pale and wanton thrillful Comes death on a strange hour Unannounced, unplanned for Like a scaring over-friendly guest you’ve brought to bedDeath makes angels of us all
And gives us wings Where we had shoulders Smooth as raven’s clawsNo more money, no more fancy dress
This other kingdom seems by far the best Until its other jaw reveals incest And loose obedience to a vegetable lawI will not go
Prefer a feast of friends To the giant family