Untangling Taylor Swift's goodbye to Joe Alwyn in ‘So Long, London'

Taylor Swift penned a painful chronicle of the end of her relationship with Joe Alwyn in "So Long, London." Here is an in-depth analysis of "The Tortured Poets Department" breakup song.

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Originally appeared on E! Online

London bridge was falling down, and Taylor Swift felt every minute.

"The Tortured Poets Department" is here and, much like fans anticipated, part of the new album is dedicated to Swift's split from Joe Alwyn in spring 2023. In fact, the 34-year-old has penned a heartbreaking tribute to the end of their six years together in "So Long, London," a poignant part two to Taylor's 2019 Lover track "London Boy."

In addition to the songs' titles, Swift has drawn a clear parallel between the two tracks by placing each as the fifth song on their respective albums. But whereas "London Boy" tells the uplifting story of a burgeoning romance — and where Midnights' "You're Losing Me" covers the beginning of the end — "So Long, London" brings the journey home by chronicling the relationship's painful demise.

In the moving track, not only does Swift say goodbye to England's capital — Alwyn's hometown and where the two spent much time during their six years together — but she also describes trying to keep the relationship together even as she could see it coming apart.

Taylor Swift & Joe Alwyn: Romance Rewind

"I saw in my mind fairy lights through the mist / I kept calm and carried the weight of the rift," she sings in the first chorus, alluding to still seeing hope in their relationship despite the growing distance. "Pulled him in tighter each time he was drifting away / My spine split from carrying us up the hill."

But as her "weary bones caught the chill," she began to give up her efforts: "I stopped trying to make him laugh, stopped trying to drill the safe."

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And whereas "London Boy" describes a joyous jaunt through London, a kind of getting-to-know the city, "So Long, London" instead shows Swift's feelings of growing isolation — especially in a city that is not her own.

"I didn't opt in to be your odd man out," she sings. "I founded the club she's heard great things about / I left all I knew, you left me at the house by the Heath."

The Grammy winner goes on to chronicle the relationship's "death," of a sort, in an echo of "You're Losing Me."

Where she sings "I can't find a pulse / My heart won't start anymore" on "Midnights," now she sings, "I stoppеd CPR, after all, it's no use / The spirit was gonе, we would never come to."

The singer also appears to allude to the time she spent with Alwyn — six years from when she was 27 to 33 — throughout the song.

"And I'm pissed off you let me give you all that youth for free," she sings in verse two, later adding in the bridge, "You swore that you loved me but where were the clues? / I died on the altar waiting for the proof."

And while she sang in "You're Losing Me" that her face had gone gray, she again alludes to color on TTPD with, "You sacrificed us to the gods of your bluest days / And I'm just getting color back into my face."

But despite her efforts to "go down with the ship" — or as she puts it, "My white-knuckle dying grip holding tight to your quiet resentment"—"So Long, London" comes to a close with the acknowledgement that the pair weren't right for each other.

"So long, London / Had a good run," she sings, "A moment of warm sun / But I'm not the one."

And though she describes the end of the relationship with a dramatic, "Two graves, one gun," Swift — who has since moved on with boyfriend Travis Kelce — also promises, "You'll find someone."

The couple was seen at the music festival in Indio, California, dancing and kissing as they supported Ice Spice as well as Jack Antonoff’s band, Bleachers.
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