Your eyes, they tie me down so hard.
I'll never learn to put up a guard.
So keep my love, my candle bright.
Learn me hard oh, learn me right.

This ain't no sham.
I am what I am.

Though I may speak, some tongue of old
Or even spit out some holy word.
I have no strength from which to speak
When you shoot me down and see I'm weak

We will run and scream.
You will dance with me.
They'll fulfill our dreams
And we'll be free
And we will be who we are
And they'll heal our scars.
Sadness will be far away.

So as we walked
Through fields of green,
It was the fairest sun I'd ever seen.
And I was broke,
I was on my knees.
You said yes as I said please.

This ain't no sham.
I am what I am.
I'll leave no time
For a cynic's mind.

We will run and scream.
You will dance with me.
Fulfill our dreams
And we'll be free
We will be who we are
And they'll heal our scars.
Sadness will be far away.

Do not let my fickle flesh go to waste
As it keeps my heart and soul in its place.
And I will love with urgency
But not with haste.


Lyrics submitted by mike, edited by jshack26, JayLovex, mrswinnie, Mellow_Harsher

Not with Haste Lyrics as written by Edward James Milton Dwane Benjamin Walter David Lovett

Lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group

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Not with Haste song meanings
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  • +1
    General Comment

    Speaking to the melody - this song references the theme in "Lover's Eyes", which in turn constructs its tune by borrowing a stanza from "Simple Gifts"/"Lord of the Dance" and slowing it down. That frames "Not with Haste" and "Lover's Eyes" as both anchored firmly in spirituality and thematically linked to each other. So while I don't necessarily disagree with the "marriage" interpretation, I think it's a bit too literal to say the author is singing about his actual marriage proposal. Instead, I'd suggest that the marriage theme should be taken symbolically and applied to the singer's personal feelings toward/relationship with god.

    In general, nearly all the main songs on this album heavily reference each other, not just thematically, but both lyrically and melodically as well. Although its most obvious here, that interconnectedness should be taken into consideration when interpreting any given song in Babel.

    zbeeblebroxon February 04, 2013   Link

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