The speaker jests that Bowie has ‘The whole world under his foot’, which appears to be a play on the hymn ‘He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands’. Compared to this ‘God’, ‘And we are small alongside’. And yet, there is some hope: ‘Though there are occasions// When a man his size can meet/ Your eyes for just a blip of time/ And send a thought like SHINE/ SHINE SHINE SHINE SHINE/ Straight to your mind.’ The repetition of ‘shine’ is an allusion to David Bowie’s song, ‘Bleed Like A Craze, Dad’, which begins in this way.
The poem concludes with the speaker’s desire to believe in Bowie (‘I want to believe you’) and her wish to feel his ‘will like the wind before rain./ The kind everything simply obeys’. She wants to be ‘Swept up in that hypnotic dance/ As if something with the power to do so/ Had looked its way and said:/ Go ahead.’ Earlier, Smith compared give her permission to do whatever she wants to do, perhaps even to ‘SHINE/ SHINE SHINE SHINE SHINE’.