I pictured a rainbow
You held it in your hands
I had flashes
But you saw the plan
I wandered out in the world for years
While you just stayed in your room
I saw the crescent
You saw the whole of the moon
The whole of the moon

Hmm, you were there in the turnstiles, with the wind at your heels
You stretched for the stars and you know how it feels to reach too high
Too far
Too soon
You saw the whole of the moon
I was grounded
While you filled the skies
I was dumbfounded by truth
You cut through lies
I saw the rain dirty valley
You saw Brigadoon
I saw the crescent
You saw the whole of the moon

I spoke about wings
You just flew
I wondered, I guessed and I tried
You just knew
I sighed
But you swooned, I saw the crescent
You saw the whole of the moon
The whole of the moon

(The whole of the moond) with a torch in your pocket and the wind at your heels
You climbed on the ladder and you know how it feels to get too high
Too far
Too soon
You saw the whole of the moon
The whole of the moon, hey yeah!

Unicorns and cannonballs, palaces and piers
Trumpets, towers and tenements
Wide oceans full of tears
Flags, rags ferryboats
Scimitars and scarves
Every precious dream and vision
Underneath the stars, yes, you climbed on the ladder
With the wind in your sails
You came like a comet
Blazing your trail too high
Too far
Too soon
You saw the whole of the moon


Lyrics submitted by bambi3k, edited by briantz6, casper1030

The Whole Of The Moon Lyrics as written by Michael Scott

Lyrics © Warner Chappell Music, Inc.

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The Whole Of The Moon song meanings
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  • +1
    General Comment

    The "too high, too far, too soon" part is what sends the shivers down my spine here... seems to suggest that whatever contact this person had with something transcendent eventually brought about their decline, perhaps their death. Like a tragic artist who senses things too strongly to survive for very long in this world. I think this song expresses genuine admiration rather than jealousy. But I wonder whether the person he's singing about really does live a life of effortless clarity, or if the singer has idealized this person, romanticized him or her. I mention this because there are people I've met who I could apply this song to, but I also know that on the inside they're probably a lot more normal than I sometimes imagine them to be... Is any person really closer to something divine than anyone else?

    Incredible, incredible song, great lyrics, and I only heard it for the first time last week!

    Quonseton October 18, 2006   Link

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