The reason "Some Enchanted Evening" works is that it uses sensory intelligence. It's a song about sensation and cognition.
Some enchanted evening--
You may see a stranger...
You may see a stranger across a crowded room...
And somehow you know--you know even then--
That somehow you'll see him again and again.
Having seen with her eyes, the heroine next hears with her ears.
You may hear him laughing across a crowded room--
And somehow you know--as strange as it seems--
The sound of his laughter will sing in your dreams.
A mysterious reaction occurs in the heart; this is logical material for a "bridge."
Who can tell you why?
Fools give you reasons--
Wise men never try.
Then, a call to action:
Fly to his side--
And make him your own--
Or, all of your life,
You will dream all alone.
It's so effective to end with the idea of dreaming, because this idea comes roaring back in the show's climax, "This Nearly Was Mine." ... "Now, now I'm alone, still dreaming of paradise, still saying that paradise....once nearly was mine...."
Hammerstein makes it look easy.
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