The Story
FROM WIKIPEDIA
Act
1
Scene
One: Regression
-- The album opens with Nicholas relaxing to the sounds of the
Hypnotherapist's voice and entering a hypnotic
state in the pursuit of regression
therapy.
Scene
Two: I. Overture 1928
-- Nicholas is in a hypnotic trance and marveling at the surreal peace
and comfort. As he settles into his trance, he begins to focus on the
subject of his regression therapy, a girl named Victoria and a life that
feels strangely similar to his own. The beginning of the overture bears
a strong likeness to parts of Metropolis
Pt. 1.
Scene
Two: II. Strange Déjà Vu
-- We hear a little more about previous dreams
that have led Nicholas to his therapy, and also continue deeper in the
current trance. We learn that every time he closes his eyes, he is taken
to this very vivid, recurring dream of another (yet just out of reach of
conscious understanding) life. We understand that it is what he's been
dreaming previously that has led him to his regression therapy.
The
dream is as follows: there is a pathway
to a house. Inside the house and upstairs is a room where a girl appears
in a mirror. All of this seems very familiar to him, but it logically
shouldn't. In this dream, probably because this is actually a hypnotic
trance and not just a regular dream, some things seem clearer than ever
before. He can see the face of a young girl and poses the question,
"Young child, won't you tell me why I'm here?" He sees that
she has something to share with him, that there is a reason she is
leading him here, a story to be told, and this story is of something
terrible that is "tearing at her soul".
Victoria
now expresses her first hint at why she is haunting Nicholas. She has
been searching for a way to reveal the truth about her murder.
She also expresses great lament,
"tears my heart into two". This along with the next line,
"I'm not the one the Sleeper thought he knew", is her guilt
that Julian Baynes (in the story also called The Sleeper) never knew
about her relationship with his brother, Senator Edward Baynes (called
The Miracle), which we learn about much later. She feels guilty for what
she did to Julian.
Now
Nicholas is out of his therapy and back in real life. Even though he is
awake, the thoughts and events of this other life are beginning to
permeate every second of his day, and this is the beginning of his
obsession with resolving this whole thing. He desperately wants to know
why this is happening and would cross over to this other world
consciously if he knew how. Nothing in the current day matters to him,
only learning more about his new obsession. It is here that he has his
first inclination that he may have actually lived in the world of which
he dreams. He knows that this dreamland holds the key to his peace, and
he will not rest until he unlocks that door.
Scene
Three: I. Through My Words
-- Nicholas realizes the link between Victoria and himself. He now knows
why he feels so drawn to her and her world as they share the same soul.
Scene
Three: II. Fatal Tragedy
-- It starts with Nicholas 'alone at night'. He knows who Victoria is
now, but not why she is so torn or how he is involved. Sometime later,
he goes to visit an older man, who the story makes a point to tell us is
'alone'. Whose house this is, and who the old man is, are things that
are never made clear throughout the story. The importance of the older
man is that he knows a little about a murder that happened a long time
ago and shares what he knows with Nicholas. We learn that a girl was
murdered, and that she was young. Nicholas sits and listens to the older
man's tale and finds that it is still a mystery today.
Nicholas
is then realizing that until he unveils the truth about what happened to
Victoria, he cannot live his current life. He is stuck in this obsession
and cannot turn back. We learn then that Nicholas understands that
without faith and hope, 'there can be no peace of mind', therefore
Nicholas encourages himself to be strong and have faith that he will
find the truth, because without the truth, he will never rest. This song
ends with the Hypnotherapist speaking. The next session starts with
taking Nicholas back to the point of the murder of Victoria.
Scene
Four: Beyond This Life
-- We learn the newspaper
account of what happened in 1928. The story is that a witness, Edward
Baynes heard a horrifying sound and upon reaching the scene of
the sound he discovers a woman who's been shot dead, and the shooter
standing over her. The witness tries to help and the shooter commits
suicide and falls on top of the dead woman. The newspaper account talks
of a sad close to a broken love affair. This indicates that the
victim and the murderer are identified as previous or maybe even current
lovers.
The
paper goes on to explain that Victoria and Julian were recently broken
up due to Julian's decadent lifestyle. There are many possibilities
regarding what evil way he had fallen into, but the DVD (Metropolis
2000: Scenes from New York) suggests that gambling
and/or drug
addiction might be of significance. Later, he also drops a liquor
bottle in scene 9, so it's possible his habit was drinking. It's also
indicated that she would have taken him back if he'd straighten up his
lifestyle. Then the newspaper asks whether it was a premeditated murder.
Next
we read an account of the physical evidence at the scene. There is
evidence of a 'violent struggle' and a switchblade
is found. The switchblade causes some confusion, because the victim is a
young girl and typically you wouldn't expect a young girl in 1928 to be
carrying a switchblade, unless she was anticipating a need to defend
herself. Also found, in the killer's pocket, is a written note. It
clearly reads that Julian would rather take his own life than live
without Victoria, but it mentions nothing of harming her.
Lastly,
there is the repetition at the end of Beyond This Life. These
lines are deepening Nicholas's belief that he and Victoria share the
same soul. They also indicate that not only souls reincarnate, but they
also carry the same personality traits with them, and deeds will follow
each soul throughout eternity.
Scene
Five: Through Her Eyes
-- Nicholas is awake again. He has learned that Victoria/he was brutally
murdered in 1928. He feels compelled to visit Victoria's grave. He
expresses the sorrow he feels for her, and how helpless and innocent she
was. Not only that, but since he's learning about his life by looking
through her eyes, he realizes that this happened to HIM also and the
unfairness of it begins to nag him.
Upon
reaching her grave, he is overcome with sadness. Even the words on her
stone indicate that she was a sweet innocent girl who had her life
brutally taken from her at a very young age. He is startled by how much
her death feels like his own. He compares it to losing someone you love.
He continues to let images of her wander through his mind as he just
wallows in his sadness for awhile. He thinks of how much more he's lived
and again is stricken by the injustice of her young death. Then as the
song ends, Nicholas begins to regain his composure and is comforted by
the realization that by facing this tragedy and mourning the loss, he
can now move on. This time of pain was necessary to accept his death in
a previous life and fully comprehend why this other life has beckoned
him.
Act
2
Scene
Six: Home
-- We hear Julian talk of his obsession with decadence and how he is
only living a charade. Ultimately, as we have learned earlier, Victoria
leaves him because of his addiction, considered by some to be a
combination of cocaine and alcohol (possibly hinted at by the lyrics
"Lines take me higher"). It is also possible that gambling is
a facet of Julian's addiction, based on the sound of coins and money
during the instrumental section after the next verse. Next we hear
Edward, giving his account of Victoria crying on his shoulder over her
break up with Julian. He finds himself falling for her, and at first
even feels guilt over deceiving his own blood. But his obsession for her
becomes stronger than his guilt and he seduces her in her vulnerable
state.
Lastly
we hear from Nicholas again, back in present day, and awake. So far he
only knows what the older man told him, and what he learned about the
newspaper article in his last therapy session. He knows there must be
more to the story and he is obsessed with solving this mystery. He
yearns for regression, cannot wait for his next therapy session so that
he can get back to solving the mystery.
There
are several lyrical similarities between "Home" and
"Metropolis Pt. 1," such as references to "the city's
cold blood" and a "lake of fire," the lines "I was
told theres a new love that's born for each one that has died".
Also, "Home" contains the lines, "Victoria watches and
thoughtfully smiles/she's taken me to my home", while
"Metropolis" features, "Metropolis watches and
thoughtfully smiles/she's taken you to your home."
Scene
Seven: I. The Dance of Eternity
-- As last line of "Metropolis Pt. 1" says, "Love is the
Dance of Eternity". This represents when Victoria and Ed make love,
The dance because of the movements and eternity as the endless memory of
that moment.
Scene
Seven: II. One Last Time
-- This song begins with Nicholas going over it in his head. He is not
convinced, from the evidence given so far, that the newspaper account is
the truth. He also appears to have heard some rumors, most likely rumors
of Victoria's affair with Ed. Did Victoria wound Ed's soul and bid him
farewell? Then we see Victoria, in the past again, saying "One last
time, we'll lay down today." This may be Nicholas hearing Victoria
telling Ed goodbye, that this will be their last meeting.
Nicholas
visits Edward's house, where he and Victoria had their affair. The house
seems to hold many clues and he feels that he is finally shown some
confirmation of what he's been thinking. Though he is now awake, as he
enters the bedroom, he experiences a sort of revelation, almost as
though he's slipped right out of consciousness. The cold returns, as he
felt in his recurring dreams before, and he's suddenly outside and hears
a woman screaming and a man pleading forgiveness. It is possible that
Nicholas at this point suspects Edward and Victoria were having an
affair. That is the suspicion to which the home holds many clues. In his
current state of dual consciousness, he is seeing Victoria's memories of
the fatal meeting, but he doesn't get enough info yet and the scene
fades to black.
Scene
Eight: The Spirit Carries On
-- Nicholas is again, and for the last time, under hypnosis and
reiterating his belief that his soul will transcend, and that he need
not fear death. He believes now that Edward was involved in the murder.
He plans to expose the truth behind a crime that happened over 70 years
ago. Victoria pipes up, in the present this time, and tells Nicholas
that he should move on now, she has revealed the truth to him, but he
should never forget her. At this point he basks in the peace that he
feels as he has appeased Victoria's nagging and his own obsession.
Nicholas now feels that the reason all of this happened, the ultimate
message, is that death is not the end, but only a transition, as the
Hypnotherapist has already pointed out.
Scene
Nine: Finally Free
-- The last scene holds information Nicholas is not aware of, because
the Hypnotherapist brings him out of his last hypnotic trance and we
hear him get in his car and leave. What we learn is that Victoria and
Julian meet by chance and decide to meet up later in secret so they can
talk. She is obviously excited because Julian is the one she has always
loved, and she's going to break it off with Edward. She is no longer
torn between Edward and Julian, who she would rather have been with. But
she knows Edward would "kill his own brother if he only knew"
of her relationship with him.
So
they meet up without anyone knowing, or so they think. Edward shows up,
begins struggling with Julian who drops a bottle of liquor
out of his coat pocket and pulls out the knife, Ed shoots Julian,
Victoria screams, Edward tells her "Open your eyes, Victoria",
and he shoots her also. Julian crawls over to her, collapses on top of
her and utters his last lines ("One last time..."). Edward
plants a suicide letter on Julian and then gets help and plays his part
as the witness.
We
then are transferred back to Nicholas. He's driving home and thinking
about how he is free of the haunting
that has plagued him. Also he has learned about his life, that it will
carry on after death, through Victoria's nagging. Nicholas then arrives
home and goes inside and begins relaxing. Another car pulls up, the
Hypnotherapist enters the room and says, "Open your eyes,
Nicholas", the phonograph
gets bumped as Nicholas is startled by the Hypnotherapist. Then we hear
static noise, which fades to black. The Hypnotherapist, Edward's
reincarnation, has killed Nicholas.
The
static noise is also the beginning of "The
Glass Prison" which is the first track on Dream
Theater's next album, Six
Degrees of Inner Turbulence.

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