Bob Dylan's song combines the romantic and the political
quite beautifully. The two strands complement each other in the song. In these lines,
Dylan comes back to the central question of what does it take to be human, which he
keeps repeating in different forms throughout the song. He examines the values of human
experience, the limits to human tolerance, indifference and habituality, before it all
breaks free in the revolutionary upsurge--" How many years will it take till we
know/That too many people have died".
These questions are
rather unanswerable and the answer will always be blowing in the wind. In the lines
quoted in the question, Dylan questions the onset of intuition, sensibility and
awareness in temporal terms. How many occasions does a man need to arouse his sense of
insight into his own social responsibility. However, at a more individual level, the
lines may also refer to the timing of epiphanic knowledge. The following lines make the
sense clear--"How many years must one man have/Before he can feel, he can cry". This is
a clarion-call to man's waning sensibility at the wake of social
disasters.
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