Gypsy_eyes: To the extent that it's that particular metaphor, I see it as being about having a very hard choice to make and choosing correctly at the cost of immediate personal indulgence.
Imagine that the ongoing battle is being fought for the good of her country on a macroscopic scale that really wouldn't be immediately obvious to a soldier. Would it really be feasible for a queen to dismiss a soldier and desert her post to be by his side? She may not have chosen to be born as royalty but does that mean she can just toss aside such a huge responsibility?
Looking at Asymmetry's quote from the author herself, tho, it seems I have it all backwards and the queen's persisting in an unjust war out of issues of national pride or something (and, realistically, that is the more likely scenario, isn't it?) but for whatever reason, that's how I see it with respect to the choice metaphor.
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The first time I heard this song was in high school AP Literature when we were covering Victorian poetry and the theme of repression as expressed therein, so the message of this poem is strongest to me as it was presented in class. My teacher gave us the text of the lyrics as a poem without revealing its author or originating time period and then explained everything and played the song after we read and analyzed it. In the context of the unit, he interpreted it as a treatise on repression in the vein of "The Lady of Shallot" and similar poems we had read that semester. I have more to say on the details of that, but "it's about repression!!!" covers it pretty well so I won't belabor the point with a line-by-line rundown on all the symbolism or anything.
Gypsy_eyes: To the extent that it's that particular metaphor, I see it as being about having a very hard choice to make and choosing correctly at the cost of immediate personal indulgence.
Imagine that the ongoing battle is being fought for the good of her country on a macroscopic scale that really wouldn't be immediately obvious to a soldier. Would it really be feasible for a queen to dismiss a soldier and desert her post to be by his side? She may not have chosen to be born as royalty but does that mean she can just toss aside such a huge responsibility?
Looking at Asymmetry's quote from the author herself, tho, it seems I have it all backwards and the queen's persisting in an unjust war out of issues of national pride or something (and, realistically, that is the more likely scenario, isn't it?) but for whatever reason, that's how I see it with respect to the choice metaphor.
~
The first time I heard this song was in high school AP Literature when we were covering Victorian poetry and the theme of repression as expressed therein, so the message of this poem is strongest to me as it was presented in class. My teacher gave us the text of the lyrics as a poem without revealing its author or originating time period and then explained everything and played the song after we read and analyzed it. In the context of the unit, he interpreted it as a treatise on repression in the vein of "The Lady of Shallot" and similar poems we had read that semester. I have more to say on the details of that, but "it's about repression!!!" covers it pretty well so I won't belabor the point with a line-by-line rundown on all the symbolism or anything.