Ah look at all the lonely people
Ah look at all the lonely people

Eleanor Rigby, picks up the rice
In the church where a wedding has been
Lives in a dream
Waits at the window, wearing the face
That she keeps in a jar by the door
Who is it for

All the lonely people
Where do they all come from?
All the lonely people
Where do they all belong?

Father McKenzie, writing the words
Of a sermon that no one will hear
No one comes near
Look at him working, darning his socks
In the night when there's nobody there
What does he care

All the lonely people
Where do they all come from?
All the lonely people
Where do they all belong?

Ah look at all the lonely people
Ah look at all the lonely people

Eleanor Rigby, died in the church
And was buried along with her name
Nobody came
Father McKenzie, wiping the dirt
From his hands as he walks from the grave
No one was saved

All the lonely people
Where do they all come from?
All the lonely people
Where do they all belong?



Lyrics submitted by Ice

Track duration: 02:04

"Eleanor Rigby" as written by John Winston Lennon, Paul James Mccartney

Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC

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Eleanor Rigby song meanings
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206 Comments

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  • 0
    My Interpretation:I think that this song can be interpreted many ways, but I'll just comment on, what I consider to be, the two most obvious interpretations. The first is based on the more superficial and tangible. The song begins and ends talking about lonely people, and asks the question, “where do they all belong”? The answer is obvious, with each other. If they were with each other they wouldn't be lonely. We all live in our own worlds. That's why Eleanor has a (public) face that she keeps in a jar by the door. We don't let others know the Real us. Why won't anyone hear the priest's sermon? It doesn't say nobody will be there, it says, “a sermon no one will hear”. The congregation will be there, they just won't hear, or understand the sermon. We tend to talk “at” each other, especially when given titles denoting authority or alleging expertise. We all live in our own world, by ourselves and that is why we are lonely.

    Interpretation #2. There is no God. Lonely = alone with no invisible friends. Notice how the whole song revolves around religion. Eleanor (old church lady) is waiting for someone, “waits at the window” – this God that she has focused her whole life on. But why are we so lonely? If we truly believe in all the stories of our wonderful invisible friend who loves and cares for us so much, and is always with us, then why are we so lonely? (because it is a lie and that is what the rest of the song is about) Pay close attention to the words No One and NoBody and how they are used. The reason “no one will hear” the sermon (and not nobody, denoting physical people with bodies) is because there is no God, no spirit or ghost listening. “Eleanor Rigby died in the church” also speaks to the way the church holds us back from our potential (guilt, original sin, comparing yourself to a perfect being, constantly worshiping authority figure) and kills our individuality (“buried along with her name”). No people seemed to show up to this lonely person's funeral, except for Father McKenzie. It specifically states that no one (not a body but an entity, a ghost or spirit) was saved. If you surrender yourself to your religion's tenets, shouldn't you receive salvation? And yet, for this religious person, “No One was saved”. Well, there's a whole lifetime thrown down the toilet, which is the point of the song.
    Flag Lyrics2Deepon March 26, 2013   Link
  • +1
    General Comment:This sounds crazy, but I'm a great fan of Dickens, and whenever I hear this song, I think of Miss Havisham. Especially at the beginning part of it. To all who are unaquainted with Miss Havisham, she is a character in Charles Dickens' Great Expectations (a very good novel, by the way.) She was jilted on her wedding day as a young girl, and her heart was broken. She stopped all of the clocks in her house at the time she was jilted, shut up all the windows, and left everything just as it was. As an old lady, she sits in her wedding dress and veil, the wedding feast still sitting out, rotten, in the dining room, and meanwhile exacts her revenge on men with her beautiful, unattainable adopted daughter, Estella. Eleanor Rigby's lonliness and her constant sort of waiting state always bring Miss Havisham to mind. So there! By reading this post you got one bibliophile's strange opinion and a literature lesson all in one!
    Flag RosesAndRuffleson December 01, 2012   Link
  • 0
    Song Meaning:I think that this song is nothing about him killing eleanor.

    I feel it's simply about two lonely people seemingly unconnected with their lonely lives. I feel the song is a case of great irony that these two by chance come together at Eleanor's burial.

    Hence "where do they all come from?" mccartney wonders where these lonely people are as they are not often seen, creating a greater sense of coincidence and irony that the two only are together when she dies. Thus F.M is still a lonely person.
    Flag elliotwhaton October 27, 2012   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:I would describe this song as eerie, or haunting. F.M. murdered E.R. for sure. The violins in certain parts of the song sound like something you would hear in a slasher film. When I hear those violins I picture F.M. stabbing E.R. repeatedly. I know it sounds gruesome.. but that image always come to mind.
    Flag gregd224on June 26, 2012   Link
  • +3
    General Comment:I think this song is simple.

    Two lonely people--Eleanor Rigby and Father McKenzie--are the subjects.

    Eleanor Rigby lives in a pretend world that she made for herself because she is so lonely and unknown--she goes into a church building after a stranger's wedding is over and grabs the rice to throw, pretending she's getting married. When she goes home, she sits by the window and smiles out, either hoping to grab someone's attention or pretending she has ("Who is it for?").

    Father McKenzie is a preacher that is probably used primarily for wedding services and his actual preaching isn't really well-attended. He spends all night fixing up his clothes to look good for a sermon no one will go to ("What does he care?").

    In the finale, Eleanor has finally died, leaving nothing but her name (which is on the tombstone), and McKenzie was the one who buried her (because a burial is done with hands and a shovel, he got dirt on them and wipes it off). Because nobody came to her funeral, no one was "saved" by the sermon he had planned for her.


    That's the story--as to its meaning, it may simply be a lament for all the people in the world that have no one.
    Flagged Mahaloon June 25, 2012   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:I think this song goes a little deeper than just lonliness.

    I think Father McKenzie is a representative of the Reaper. He "wrote" sermon for Eleanor's funeral and killed her, thus he is seen "wiping his hands from the dirt as he walks from the grave"

    Also, they mention that Eleanor was buries with her name. This represents that, even in this lonely world, you aren't truly dead until you're forgtton.
    Flagged SyaoronTheFoxon May 19, 2012   Link
  • +3
    General Comment:I've had an inspiration about the meaning of this song and joined specifically so I could share my inspiration. I have not read all the comments because there are a lot but I read most of them and none of you got this. A few hinted at it but none of you got this.

    I'm going to come right out and say that this song was directed at the church. This song was directed at Christianity in general. Singing about Father McKenzie was not singing about a random individual who happened to be a church leader. For the purpose of this song, Father McKenzie =IS= the representation of Christianity. "Ah, look at all the lonely people" and "No one was saved".

    Yes, there is a hint of a connection between Father McKenzie and Eleanor Rigby. But the song is not saying that they did anything together. The two might never have even spoken outside of the usual church banter. What the song is suggesting is that there should have been more of a connection between Father McKenzie and Eleanor Rigby. But "No one was saved" because Father McKenzie was too busy being self-righteous, too busy "writing the words of a sermon that no one will hear." This song is a bold-faced accusation against the self-righteous and overly religious that refuse to reach out to the all the lonely people and then wonder why so few come to church.

    This song is saying that it isn't enough to be friendly. This song is saying that as long as people, especially religious people, remain cold and aloof, the Eleanor Rigby's of this world will continue to die and be "buried along with her name". A person's name is very important in Judeo-Christian values.
    Flagged hannielebedon February 29, 2012   Link
  • -1
    General Comment:This song is very obviously about lonely people dying without having anyone. To me, this song has very weird things associated with it. When I was little, I would always stay at my grandparents house, it was here I learnt all the great beatles songs. On a particular visit to their house, we walked through a graveyard and my brother had just learnt this song and he was singing it. Later that night, I was sleeping and I woke up to someone standing next to my bed blowing bubbles. I'm certain it was real but no one believes me so I'll just say it was a dream. I closed my eyes and pretended it wasn't happening and this song was just running through my mind the whole time. I think the person who stood beside my bed was lonely and he wanted my company. Whenever I hear this song, I cry for all the lonely people.
    Flag Strutheyon February 14, 2012   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:This song to me feels like feeling lonely and seeing absolutely no point in your life, or the things you do. And then I really admire eleanor and father mc kenzie for going on. So I guess in that way it is encouraging. Everyone has value. But it is a real shame not everybodys value get noticed. Then the song is maybe commentary on society also a bit. But I might also be taking it to far.
    Flag BrILjanTjeon January 15, 2012   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:well u guys are all somewhat right the song is talking about a funeral and the name was not taken from a gravestone or tombstone it was gonna be father mcarthy but they thought it would scare his father so they went to a phonebook and picked a random name so that is how they got father mkenzie but the name eleanor rigby did come from a gravestone
    Flag abelsha101on December 20, 2011   Link

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