Song Meaning
The speaker directly confronts a doctor, rejecting a proposed "operation" to correct their vision. The doctor sees the speaker's current perception as an "aberration caused by old age," a medical affliction. However, the speaker insists this vision is the culmination of a lifetime's effort, a hard-won perspective that has taken "fifty-four years before I could see."
The core tension lies in the clash between a clinical, objective view of sight and the speaker's subjective, artistic interpretation. The doctor wants to "restore my youthful errors," specifically "fixed notions of top and bottom" and "the illusion of three-dimensional space." These are the very things the speaker has learned to "soften and blur," to "banish" in favor of a more integrated, impressionistic reality where "sky and water... are the same state of being."
The lyrics masterfully employ visual language to articulate this perceptual shift. Streetlights in Paris are not merely lights but possess "haloes," and gas lamps are perceived as "angels." The "line I called the horizon" is revealed to be an illusion, dissolving into a unified state of being. Even Rouen Cathedral is not solid stone but "parallel shafts of sun," and wisteria is not distinct from the bridge it adorns. This reframing of the mundane into the sublime is the speaker's hard-won truth.
This perspective is deeply effective because it refutes the idea that aging necessarily diminishes perception. Instead, it suggests that with time and deliberate effort, one can arrive at a richer, more profound way of seeing the world. The speaker's refusal of the operation is a powerful assertion of artistic integrity and the value of a unique, cultivated vision over a conventionally "corrected" one.