Don't know what to do anymore
I've lost the only love worth fighting for
And I'll drown in my tears, don't they see?
And that would show you, that would make you hurt like me

All the same
I don't want mudslinging games
It's just a shame
To let you walk away

Is there a chance, a fragment of light
At the end of the tunnel, a reason to fight?
Is there a chance you might change your mind
Or are we ashes and wine?

Don't know if our fate's already sealed
This day's a spinning surface on a wheel
And I'm ill with the thought of your kiss
Coffee-laced, intoxicating on her lips

Shut it out
I've got no claim on you now
Not allowed
To wear your freedom down, no

Is there a chance, a fragment of light
At the end of the tunnel, a reason to fight?
Is there a chance you might change your mind
Or are we ashes and wine?

And I'll tear myself away
That is what you need
There is nothing left to say

But is there a chance, a fragment of light
At the end of the tunnel, a reason to fight?
Is there a chance you may change your mind
Or are we ashes and wine?
The day's still ashes and wine
Or are we ashes?


Lyrics submitted by MusicLady86

Ashes and Wine Lyrics as written by Alison Sudol Lukas Mcguire Burton

Lyrics © Downtown Music Publishing, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.

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Ashes and Wine song meanings
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  • +1
    General Comment

    I understand Alison Sudol loves and is inspired by great literature. The lyric in the song -- "ashes in wine" -- maybe it has some relationship to Greek legend of a woman drinking her lover's ashes in wine and to an ancient epitaph: "We, the dead, are only bones and ashes: waste no precious ointments or wreaths upon our tomb, for it is only marble; kindle no funeral pyre, for it is useless extravagance. If you have anything to give, give it while I am alive; but if you steep ashes in wine you only make mud, for the dead man does not drink." (as quoted in an essay on Omar Khayyam by Nathan Haskell Dole in the "Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern", page 8456 [retrieved from Google Books]. Of course, even if Alison Sudol were playing off this theme, it does not "fix" the meaning of her song, but I think it helps to consider it as having less direct meanings and multiple layers of meaning. It is a great, great song.

    florafotograficaon July 14, 2008   Link

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