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The Doors – The Soft Parade Lyrics 16 years ago
Jim Morrison was a poetic genius and this song is most definitely a criticism of modern life. even from the first lines it demonstrates his dissatisfaction with the lazy belief that god will give you whatever you want as long as you pray. the next lines have a double meaning. they can represent his feelings that he's out of place in the selfish, lazy, society or it could represent how easily people are offended by intellectual opinions, searching for sanctuary from the man at the door who can be inferred to be angered by his statement. the next lines go on to cite examples of the american desires of luxury, women, and acknowledgement. the four ways to get unraveled are also criticisms of laziness, running away from ones problems, crime, and lust. the next lines refer to the futility of life. catacombs and nursery bones signify death, and winter women growing stones and carrying babies to the river can also have a double meaning of either the fruitless efforts (growing stones) or more likely the raising of children to be just as thoughtless and deluded as their parents. "the monk bought lunch" immediately instigates a dramatic shift in the tone of the music, as if the irony of a monk, who traditionally begged for their food, buying his own lunch which can represent either the cruelty of people to their fellow humans or the hypocrisy of modern religion, actually causes a realization in the music itself. i'm not certain which song, but i know that in another song morrison says "this is the best part of the trip", so his intentionally reversing the lyrics emphasizes the backwards shift of the tone. successful hills signify the perceived success of this way of life and "everything must be this way" just means that people have grown so comfortable with it that they are unwilling to open their minds. "all our lives we sweat and saving building for a shallow grave" is mocking the way people strive for meaningless goals and find as they die that their lives have been worthless. the people who think that there "must be something else" are immediately silenced by a double repetition of "everything must be this way". "listen to the engines hum" is referring to life (the soft parade) as many poets and writers have used a machine as a metaphor for life (for example Welcome To The Machine by Pink Floyd). the leopard is a common symbol for lust or incontinence, so logically the cobra represents agression, making a reference to sigmund freud's theory of the human subconscious composed of sex and agression. the hunter of the green vest can represent the military and the claim that he has "wrestled before with lions in the night" is a criticism of society's glorification of military might. the moaning radio that's calling all the dogs signifies the way modern life is controlled by the media and "its getting harder to describe sailors to the underfed" means that as time goes on those who lack true freedom are unable to recognize a "sailor" who can be interpreted as a free spirit, the epitome of freedom. from here on the repetition and the seemingly nonsense lyrics represent corruption (animals in the yard, and crossroads were believed to be a place where people met with the devil). the last couple lines represent the cruel desire to force everything possible out of something that has almost nothing left to offer. so yeah, its an entire song criticizing the futility and corruption of modern life.

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