Call me crazy, but when I first heard this song, I thought it was about The Great Gatsby. Gatsby is standing on his side of the island, staring out at the green light across the way, pining after Daisy who is on her separate island. There's no mention of the iconic green light, granted, but the opening lines do say that the singer is "near your [his love's] island" and "off the coast," and explicitly states that they were former lovers. I know Gatsby waited for Daisy for 5 years, but the song opens with 5 days… But I wonder how long Gatsby and Daisy were together after being reunited. If it was 5 days or so, then this opening could be really morbid (SPOILER ALERT), as it could be Gatsby in his last moments "underwater" in the pool thinking about his love affair with Daisy.
The second stanza of the song, the singer talks about how his love is waiting (or at least he imagines, perhaps too naively, that she has been waiting). The tone sounds sad and apologetic; he is sorry that his love has been waiting so long and likely has been very lonely, so lonely and miserable that the whole world has known for "so long now."
If this is from Gatsby's point of view, then he assumes right, that Daisy is unhappy and waiting for /something/ more, however, I think he assumes wrong that she's waiting for him. It's been a while since I read the book, but I'm pretty sure Daisy wasn't thinking much of Gatsby or her promise to wait for him until he suddenly reappeared on her doorstep. To add to my interpretation is the line "Oh, I thought you knew that I'd be coming." Gatsby has never stopped thinking of his beloved, so he assumed that Daisy was the same and had been waiting forlornly for five years for him to swoop in and carry her away. So the line expresses mild surprise that she should be surprised he came for her.
The last stanza is the one that hits home the most for me, and really makes me feel that the Gatsby interpretation has some believability. The pearls given to Daisy by Tom in the book are symbolic of her character, and how empty and superficial the Buchanan's life is. So it is interesting that "Islands" should talk about "pearl" and "those stones you wear." Obviously the woman the singer is pining for is a woman of wealth, although she doesn't seem to care, or she's just disillusioned, because she's casting them into the low tide.
I really feel the whole last stanza is a projection of the singer's imagination. He imagines she casts her pearl and stones into the water, he wonders about whether she feels hollow, and that her finery lacks warmth and meaning when she realizes her marriage is a sham and her husband is always leaving her (to be with Myrtle?).
I especially like that the song ends on a somber, inconclusive note. He's missed her warmth--but has she missed his? This is where, in my interpretation, Gatsby would be skimming the reality of the situation and losing that idealistic image from the first stanza and beginning of the second. Perhaps, he thinks, Daisy was not as desperate for him as he was for her.
I just relistened to the song, and found that my interpretation is even more apt, considering the first stanza's lines are wrongly written, The first stanza, actually says, "Oh, out in the glow I'll find you waiting, Oh, has it been so long now, aa-aah (I?)" There I believe is the green light from the book, in the "glow."
I just relistened to the song, and found that my interpretation is even more apt, considering the first stanza's lines are wrongly written, The first stanza, actually says, "Oh, out in the glow I'll find you waiting, Oh, has it been so long now, aa-aah (I?)" There I believe is the green light from the book, in the "glow."
Call me crazy, but when I first heard this song, I thought it was about The Great Gatsby. Gatsby is standing on his side of the island, staring out at the green light across the way, pining after Daisy who is on her separate island. There's no mention of the iconic green light, granted, but the opening lines do say that the singer is "near your [his love's] island" and "off the coast," and explicitly states that they were former lovers. I know Gatsby waited for Daisy for 5 years, but the song opens with 5 days… But I wonder how long Gatsby and Daisy were together after being reunited. If it was 5 days or so, then this opening could be really morbid (SPOILER ALERT), as it could be Gatsby in his last moments "underwater" in the pool thinking about his love affair with Daisy.
The second stanza of the song, the singer talks about how his love is waiting (or at least he imagines, perhaps too naively, that she has been waiting). The tone sounds sad and apologetic; he is sorry that his love has been waiting so long and likely has been very lonely, so lonely and miserable that the whole world has known for "so long now."
If this is from Gatsby's point of view, then he assumes right, that Daisy is unhappy and waiting for /something/ more, however, I think he assumes wrong that she's waiting for him. It's been a while since I read the book, but I'm pretty sure Daisy wasn't thinking much of Gatsby or her promise to wait for him until he suddenly reappeared on her doorstep. To add to my interpretation is the line "Oh, I thought you knew that I'd be coming." Gatsby has never stopped thinking of his beloved, so he assumed that Daisy was the same and had been waiting forlornly for five years for him to swoop in and carry her away. So the line expresses mild surprise that she should be surprised he came for her.
The last stanza is the one that hits home the most for me, and really makes me feel that the Gatsby interpretation has some believability. The pearls given to Daisy by Tom in the book are symbolic of her character, and how empty and superficial the Buchanan's life is. So it is interesting that "Islands" should talk about "pearl" and "those stones you wear." Obviously the woman the singer is pining for is a woman of wealth, although she doesn't seem to care, or she's just disillusioned, because she's casting them into the low tide.
I really feel the whole last stanza is a projection of the singer's imagination. He imagines she casts her pearl and stones into the water, he wonders about whether she feels hollow, and that her finery lacks warmth and meaning when she realizes her marriage is a sham and her husband is always leaving her (to be with Myrtle?).
I especially like that the song ends on a somber, inconclusive note. He's missed her warmth--but has she missed his? This is where, in my interpretation, Gatsby would be skimming the reality of the situation and losing that idealistic image from the first stanza and beginning of the second. Perhaps, he thinks, Daisy was not as desperate for him as he was for her.
I just relistened to the song, and found that my interpretation is even more apt, considering the first stanza's lines are wrongly written, The first stanza, actually says, "Oh, out in the glow I'll find you waiting, Oh, has it been so long now, aa-aah (I?)" There I believe is the green light from the book, in the "glow."
I just relistened to the song, and found that my interpretation is even more apt, considering the first stanza's lines are wrongly written, The first stanza, actually says, "Oh, out in the glow I'll find you waiting, Oh, has it been so long now, aa-aah (I?)" There I believe is the green light from the book, in the "glow."