Lyrics of 'Warsaw' by Sharon Van Etten

On our website, we have the complete lyrics of the song Warsaw that you were looking for.

If you've been searching for the lyrics of the song Warsaw by Sharon Van Etten for a long time, start warming up your voice, because you won't be able to stop singing it.

You
When you listen
In a color of sorrow
You're over me

You
With eyes through me
Leaning towards, but not giving in wholly

You, you're something
You mean something
Genuinely, showing me
Genuinely open to you

Here
Sing me yourself
Tell me you want to be shown or
You'll only listen
To an endless sea you want to be over

He is over you
He is over you

I want to be over you
I want to show you

Pull me over you
Arms are over you
I want to show you
I love you silently

There are many reasons to want to know the lyrics of Warsaw by Sharon Van Etten.

The most common reason to want to know the lyrics of Warsaw is that you really like it. Obvious, right?

When we really like a song, as might be your case with Warsaw by Sharon Van Etten, we wish to be able to sing it knowing the lyrics well.

Knowing what the lyrics of Warsaw say allows us to put more feeling into the performance.

If your motivation for searching for the lyrics of the song Warsaw was that you absolutely love it, we hope you can enjoy singing it.

Feel like a star singing the song Warsaw by Sharon Van Etten, even if your audience is just your two cats.

A very common reason to search for the lyrics of Warsaw is the fact that you want to know them well because they make you think of a special person or situation.

It's important to note that Sharon Van Etten, in live concerts, has not always been or will be faithful to the lyrics of the song Warsaw... So it's better to focus on what the song Warsaw says on the record.

On this page, you have at your disposal hundreds of song lyrics, like Warsaw by Sharon Van Etten.

Remember that whenever you need to know the lyrics of a song, you can always turn to us, as has happened now with the lyrics of the song Warsaw by Sharon Van Etten.