It's fairly clear that this song has to do with misogyny, and the contradiction that so often the men who hate and disrespect women also desire them sexually. The second to last verse shows this the best: Freud and Rilke are famous for their disdain for women, and Rimbaud is best known as a homosexual. I'm not sure what the significance of Jim Morrison's elevators is, though.
It's fairly clear that this song has to do with misogyny, and the contradiction that so often the men who hate and disrespect women also desire them sexually. The second to last verse shows this the best: Freud and Rilke are famous for their disdain for women, and Rimbaud is best known as a homosexual. I'm not sure what the significance of Jim Morrison's elevators is, though.