The Civil Wars - Sacred Heart
The Civil Wars - Sacred Heart


The Civil Wars - Sacred Heart Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

Album: The Civil Wars
Released: 2013

Sacred Heart Lyrics


Quand je marche dans la rue
La rue vers le Sacré-Cœur
Je me souviens des promesses
Au nom de l’amour

Je, je vais t’attendre lÁ
Viendras-tu pour moi?
Je vais t’attendre lÁ
Seulement toi

Tu peux me tenir
Jusqu’Á ce que le soleil se cache
Et embrasse-moi doucement
Jusqu’Á ce qu’il revienne

Je vais t’attendre lÁ
Viendras-tu pour moi?
Je vais t’attendre lÁ
Seulement toi

Tu prends peut-être du retard
Tu as peut-être raté ton train
Tu ne peux peut-être pas me pardonner

Les ombres grandissent
Et les foules s’effacent

Je, je vais t’attendre lÁ
Viendras-tu pour moi?
Je vais t’attendre lÁ
Seulement toi
Seulement toi

Writer/s: JOHN WHITE, JOY WILLIAMS
Publisher: Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Sacred Heart
  • Joy Williams and John Paul White of The Civil Wars wrote this song one cold night in a Paris flat, with the Eiffel Tower in full view. Williams recalled: "Tall windows, Victorian furniture, and somehow the atmosphere of all of that seeped into the song. (Her husband) Nate and our friends were there in the room as we wrote, all of us drinking wine together."
  • Williams sings the song in French. She recalled: "I wrote what words I knew in French, and then had a Parisian friend named Renata Pepper (yes, that's her real name) look it over later and help me translate. When we recorded the song for the album, I called in a French professor from Vanderbilt named Becky Peterson, who has now become a good friend."
  • An English translation of the start of the song is:

    "When I walk in the street.
    The street to the Sacred Heart."

    The Sacré-Cœur (Sacred Heart) Basilica is a Roman Catholic church in Paris. It is dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, an increasingly popular vision of a loving and sympathetic Christ. The church was planned in 1873 with the aim of expiating the spiritual and moral collapse of France, which was felt to have led to the defeat of the French by the Prussians. Its location on the summit of the butte Montmartre, ('martyrs mount'), the highest point in the city, was deliberate.