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Madman Across the Water Lyrics

I can see very well.
There's a boat on the reef with a broken back
And I can see it very well.
There's a joke and I know it very well,
It's one of those that I told you long ago.
Take my word I'm a madman don't you know.

Once a fool had a good part in the play,
If it's so would I still be here today?
It's quite peculiar in a funny sort of way,
They think it's very funny everything I say.
Get a load of him, he's so insane
You'd better get your coat dear
It looks like rain.

We'll come agan next Thursday afternoon.
The Inlaws hope they'll see you very soon.
But is it in your conscience that you're after
Another glimpse of the Madman across the Water.

I can see very well.
There's a boat on the reef with a broken back
And I can see it very well.
There's a joke and I know it very well,
It's one of those that I told you long ago.
Take my word I'm a madman don't you know.

The ground's a long way down but I need more.
Is the nightmare black
or are the windows painted?
Will they come again next week,
Can my mind really take it?

We'll come agan next Thursday afternoon.
The Inlaws hope they'll see you very soon.
But is it in your conscience that you're after
Another glimpse of the Madman across the Water.
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Cover art for Madman Across the Water lyrics by Elton John

I have a different interpretation. The madman is not really a madman; he is merely perceived as a madman; and he views the ones that see him as a mere curiosity as mad. The madman is a recluse comparable to "The fool on the hill." In the Beatles song, other people considered him a fool, but the fool "never listens to them, he knows that they're the fools. They don't like him. But the fool on the hill sees the sun going down and the eyes in his head see the world spinning round."

The madman "can see very well," a sign of sanity, not insanity. The image he clearly sees is very significant: the boat on the reef with a broken back signifies something broken in his life and that is why he is stranded in life. The joke that he knows very well is "take my word I'm a madman don't you know." In other words, he doesn't consider himself a madman.

The madman was the fool who had a good part in the play; in other words, his life had been good until misfortune (represented by the broken boat) caused him to be where he is today. Others that see him think he is insane, and that everything he says is funny; but clearly the madman does not share their viewpoint. The others quickly leave when it looks like it will "rain." probably a metaphor for trouble. Thus the madman sees these people as very shallow, and have not had the madman's depth of experience (he has had to deal with bigger problems than "rain").

Although the madman is not crazy, what drives him crazy is the in-laws treating him as a freak-show curiousity. When he asks "Is the nightmare black or are the windows painted?" he quickly follows that with another question: "Will they come again next week, can my mind really take it?" In other words, the in-laws are the nightmare and are making him crazy. Finally, the madman asks us to evaluate our own conscience. Is treating him as a freak-show curiousity the right thing to do? This is a rather sensible question for a "madman."

Song Meaning

Yep, Mark2Marie, I think you hit the nail on the head.

Lyricist Bernie Taupin married American Maxine Feibelman in 1971 and this song was released that year. The connotation is that her family viewed her new English husband as "the madman from across the water," though he thought them to be the crazy ones.

I am reminded of the saying: Sometimes it's easier to see from the outside looking in, than it is from the inside looking out, and I think that might be the "joke" he is referring to. Bernie can see out the window, see the...

Not Valid

@mark2marie this is an excellent interpretation of a very cryptic long. Thanks!

Cover art for Madman Across the Water lyrics by Elton John

The version with Mick Ronson on guitar is one of the best rock songs ever created.

@kyuss67 Maybe, but the "Live in Australia" album where Elton is backed by a full orchestra has to be by far the best version of this song (unless we're talking about the same version).

Cover art for Madman Across the Water lyrics by Elton John

I can see very well. There's a boat on the reef with a broken back And I can see it very well.

I imagine he's in a home for the mentally insane and 
looking out of his window from his room he has a view of a beach.
A short ways off shore there is a small wooden boat that has run 'aground' on a reef.
The boat's back is broken.  He feels as though he is the boat.
The boat was trying to make it back to shore, but couldn't.
He was trying to make it back to sanity, but couldn't.

There's a joke and I know it very well, It's one of those that I told you long ago. Take my word I'm a madman don't you know.

A long time ago he tried to talk to his loved ones (family) about his problem.
They wouldn't believe him, they thought he must be joking.
Now his family sees him as a sad joke.

Once a fool had a good part in the play,

His family feels that he was born into a good family, with good financial and emotional support.
He foolishly squandered his resources and benefits and is now unable to cope.

If it's so would I still be here today?

If he was raised so good, and his family gave him all the opportunities he could need then, 
why is he still in the nut house?

It's quite peculiar in a funny sort of way, They think it's very funny everything I say. Get a load of him, he's so insane

He feels that his family laughs at him behind his back.

You'd better get your coat dear It looks like rain.

The visit is over, they are getting to leave.

We'll come again next Thursday afternoon. The Inlaws hope they'll see you very soon.

Things that they are saying to him as they are getting ready to leave.

But is it in your conscience that you're after Another glimpse of the Madman across the Water.

The reason why he thinks they visit him is just to
take another look at their crazy relative.

I can see very well. There's a boat on the reef with a broken back And I can see it very well. There's a joke and I know it very well, It's one of those that I told you long ago. Take my word I'm a madman don't you know.

The ground's a long way down but I need more.

The distance from his window to the ground is not far enough
to guarantee death if he were to jump.

Is the nightmare black or are the windows painted?

Many crazy people retreat from the 'outside world' or reality
into their minds where they are more comfortable.  
    His room represents his inside world and the windows represent 
    a view to the outside world or reality,
    a place that is "nightmarish" to him.

Will they come again next week, Can my mind really take it?

He really hates it when he gets visitors.
He wishes that they would just forget about him and
leave him alone.  He feels like a spectacle in a freak show.

We'll come agan next Thursday afternoon. The Inlaws hope they'll see you very soon. But is it in your conscience that you're after Another glimpse of the Madman across the Water.

My Interpretation

yes. no nixon. no specific. just the sadness of madness and how the family often triggers it.

thank you for your thoughtful post.

eyzovblu

Not Valid

Good job rockslider. My interpretation is very close, instead of a guy in a nut house though, it has more to do with Bernie Taupin's relatives thoughts of him and his lifestyle

Cover art for Madman Across the Water lyrics by Elton John

I think this song is about Bernie's new inlaws driving him crazy after her married Maxine. I'm not positive, but I think they had moved to England for a while and her parents missed her. I do'nt know why everyone hates this song. It blew me away the first time I heard it. I was driving home and it was raining.

Cover art for Madman Across the Water lyrics by Elton John

This is easily one of Elton's most powerful and yet underrated songs. If you ever get the chance, give a listen to Bruce Hornsby's interpretation of it on the Elton/Bernie Tribute album "Two Rooms". At this point, the meaning for me is rather abstract...I agree with what one person said about the song being autobiographical. I also think that the person (Suzy34) who mentioned it was about Bernie's wife and in-laws driving him crazy. They may both be right. They may both be wrong too. Hard to say. I also agree with Suzy about the song blowing me away. Its is easily his most intense and darkest piece of all.

Cover art for Madman Across the Water lyrics by Elton John

"Take my word Im a madman don't you know?"

I think that line is so awesome.

@ImNeilYoung Truly awesome. Amazing how he can even make his singing sound sarcastic, isn't it?

Cover art for Madman Across the Water lyrics by Elton John

Having been around when this song first came out in the early 70's let me give you a historical perspective. Back then, we always though the madman was he was refering to was Nixon and the "boat on the reef with a broken back" refered to the ship of state. The "good part in a play" refered to being Vice President under Eisenhower. The in laws refered to his daughter Julie Nixon marrying Eisenhower's grandson. The joke and the think it's very funny everything I say, refered to his, "and you won't have Dick Nixon to kick around anymore" after loosing the California Gov. race in 1962 and his appearance on "Laugh In" when he said,"Sock it to me," in 1968. Remember that was a different time. People wrote songs for other purposes than just making money.

Song Meaning

@coa4thva Respectfully as you are obviously a very thoughtful individual: Neither this song, nor American Pie (it was also alleged to be about US political players) has anything to do with Nixon. Songs were written poetically in the '60s and '70s and sometimes there were political allegorical or analogous subtexts to them. This is not one of them.

@coa4thva You know, songs used to have double meanings back before pop music took over. It could very well be that both of your interpretations are correct.

Cover art for Madman Across the Water lyrics by Elton John

I think this song is autobiographical. The Madman Across the Water is Elton John himself, being from the UK and making it big in the US.

Elton John is brilliant. Most of the time brilliant people are chastised and misunderstood, thus the lines, “They think it's very funny everything I say, Get a load of him, he's so insane.”

Undoubtedly he was probably chastised by his family, which is also typical of brilliant people. “You'd better get your coat dear, it looks like rain. We'll come again next Thursday afternoon. The In-laws hope they'll see you very soon….Will they come again next week, can my mind really take it?”

@seetee These Lyrics, like all of Elton's classic period, were penned by Bernie Taupin. The lyrics of Elton's songs were rarely about Elton or any part of his life. There are exceptions ("Someone Saved My Life Tonight" is one) but typically when there was personal significance in an EJ lyric it was relevant to Bernie's life.

Cover art for Madman Across the Water lyrics by Elton John

I've heard from a few people that the Madman in question is Richard Nixon, but I dont' think it quite fits.

Cover art for Madman Across the Water lyrics by Elton John

When I was younger my dad told me this song is about Hitler. Who knows? It's kind of hard to tell from the lyrics...