| Song | The Great Event (Album Version) |
| Artist | Leonard Cohen |
| Album | More Best Of |
| Download | Image LRC TXT |
| [00:00.00] | 作曲 : Leonard Cohen |
| [00:01.00] | 作词 : Leonard Cohen |
| [00:16.57] | It's going to happen very soon. |
| [00:19.57] | The great event which will end the horror. |
| [00:22.77] | Which will end the sorrow. |
| [00:25.33] | Next Tuesday, when the sun goes down, |
| [00:28.65] | I will play the Moonlight Sonata backwards. |
| [00:32.27] | This will reverse the effects of the world's mad plunge into suffering, |
| [00:35.77] | for the last 200 million years. |
| [00:40.84] | What a lovely night that would be. |
| [00:43.71] | What a sigh of relief, as the senile robins become bright red again, |
| [00:49.21] | and the retired nightingales, pick up their dusty tails, |
| [00:54.15] | and assert the majesty of creation! |
| [00:00.00] | zuo qu : Leonard Cohen |
| [00:01.00] | zuo ci : Leonard Cohen |
| [00:16.57] | It' s going to happen very soon. |
| [00:19.57] | The great event which will end the horror. |
| [00:22.77] | Which will end the sorrow. |
| [00:25.33] | Next Tuesday, when the sun goes down, |
| [00:28.65] | I will play the Moonlight Sonata backwards. |
| [00:32.27] | This will reverse the effects of the world' s mad plunge into suffering, |
| [00:35.77] | for the last 200 million years. |
| [00:40.84] | What a lovely night that would be. |
| [00:43.71] | What a sigh of relief, as the senile robins become bright red again, |
| [00:49.21] | and the retired nightingales, pick up their dusty tails, |
| [00:54.15] | and assert the majesty of creation! |
| [00:00.00] | zuò qǔ : Leonard Cohen |
| [00:01.00] | zuò cí : Leonard Cohen |
| [00:16.57] | It' s going to happen very soon. |
| [00:19.57] | The great event which will end the horror. |
| [00:22.77] | Which will end the sorrow. |
| [00:25.33] | Next Tuesday, when the sun goes down, |
| [00:28.65] | I will play the Moonlight Sonata backwards. |
| [00:32.27] | This will reverse the effects of the world' s mad plunge into suffering, |
| [00:35.77] | for the last 200 million years. |
| [00:40.84] | What a lovely night that would be. |
| [00:43.71] | What a sigh of relief, as the senile robins become bright red again, |
| [00:49.21] | and the retired nightingales, pick up their dusty tails, |
| [00:54.15] | and assert the majesty of creation! |