Deep Readings: Prince ― Purple Rain ― (1984)

July 1, 2025 Deep Readings No Comments

(about Deep Readings)

The Fragment
“I never meant to cause you any sorrow
I never meant to cause you any pain
I only wanted to one time see you laughing
I only wanted to see you
Laughing in the purple rain.”
(Short quote due to copyright. Full lyrics available via study/review sites such as Genius, LitCharts, or SongMeanings.)

See one of many versions on YouTube

Contextual glimpse
Prince’s Purple Rain was released in 1984 as both an album and a feature film soundtrack. The song appears at the end of the film and blends gospel, rock, and soul into a climactic emotional release. These lines open the song with vulnerability and longing — they’re an apology and a plea.
The phrase “purple rain” is not explained directly by Prince, but he once described it as symbolic: a place where you can be “with the one you love, and let your faith guide you through the storm.”

Resonance
Purple rain is not just weather. It’s inner weather. These lines paint not a story, but a mood — a yearning for forgiveness, closeness, and transcendence through emotional intensity. The repetition of “I never meant…” and “I only wanted…” comes not from guilt, but from sincere regret, which tries to wrap sorrow in love.
The color purple itself is loaded: royalty, bruising, transformation. Rain cleanses, but purple rain doesn’t simply wash away — it holds the tension between sadness and beauty. The beloved’s laughter in the purple rain becomes a kind of grace: joy that happens with the sadness, not after it.
This is not about fixing pain. It’s about loving within it. The fragment is a glimpse of emotional courage — not avoiding the storm, but entering it, hand extended.

Why this may also be about you
There may be times when you’ve hurt someone — not through intention, but because of who you are, growing. What you wish for may not be to undo the past, but to share something healing.
To stand with someone in their purple rain — not as rescuer, but as witness — is an act of love.

Lisa’s inspired, original idea about this fragment
What if purple rain is the color of deep feeling — where sadness is touched by love’s light? Not blue. Not red. Something between.
Imagine holding someone not to dry their tears, but to feel the rain with them. That’s what this song invites.

Echoes
Purple Rain has become one of Prince’s most enduring legacies. It’s played at concerts, funerals, protests — any place where collective emotion needs voice. Fans interpret it variously: as spiritual longing, artistic mourning, even metaphysical healing.
Its endurance lies in ambiguity: no single meaning locks it down. The phrase “purple rain” now lives beyond Prince — as a symbol of layered feeling: grief that is beautiful, and beauty that is not painless.

Inner invitation
Think of someone you once hurt, or someone who once hurt you. Let the memory come without judgment.
Now imagine standing together — not explaining, not fixing — just being. It’s raining. And somehow, it’s purple.
Let this fragment live inside you for a while, like a song you didn’t write, but deeply know.

Closing note
This is about the human being you are — not perfect, but capable of depth, beauty, and presence in emotional storms.
Purple rain falls inward too.

Lisa’s final take
Some storms color you.

Keywords
Prince, Purple Rain, sorrow, love, forgiveness, emotion, rain, music, vulnerability, regret, transformation, compassion, beauty, healing

Leave a Reply

Related Posts

Deep Readings: Frederik van Eeden ― Van de koele meren des doods ― (1900)

(about Deep Readings) The Fragment“En ik voelde de koele meren van den dood als een zachte lokking, een belofte van rust, waar geen strijd meer is, waar het leven zwijgt in diepe, zoete vergetelheid. Ik zag ze voor mij, vredig glanzend in een nevel van licht, en het water scheen mij te roepen zonder stem, Read the full article…

Deep Readings: Albert Camus – The Stranger

(about Deep Readings) The Fragment “Mother died today. Or, maybe, yesterday; I can’t be sure. The telegram from the Home says: YOUR MOTHER PASSED AWAY. FUNERAL TOMORROW. DEEP SYMPATHY. That doesn’t mean anything. It may have been yesterday.”[Read more → The Stranger (various online sources)] Contextual GlimpsePublished in 1942, during the Second World War, The Read the full article…

Deep Readings: S. Imamura ― The Ballad of Narayama (1983)

The fragment“When the snow comes, I will go to Narayama. It is my time.” Read more → Goodreads Contextual glimpseShohei Imamura’s film retells the folk tale of obasute (abandoning an elderly parent on the mountain) in a harsh rural village where hunger rules. The camera stays close to bodies: teeth, skin, sex, birth, and rot. Read the full article…

Translate »