Secret Love
Frank Sinatra Lyrics


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Once I had a secret love that lived within the heart of me,
All too soon my secret love became impatient to be free.
So I asked a friendly star the way that lovers often do
Just how wonderful you are and why I'm so in love with you.
Now I shout it from the highest hill, even told the golden daffodils,
And now my heart's an open door, and my secret love's no secret any more.




Overall Meaning

The lyrics to Frank Sinatra’s song “Secret Love” tell a story of a hidden love within oneself that yearns to be set free. The singer tells of how they used to keep this love a secret, but eventually it became too much for them to bear. They then turn to the stars to find out just how wonderful their beloved is and why they are so in love with them. The lyrics further highlight how the love was no longer a secret as the singer declares it to the world from the highest hill, telling the golden daffodils and how their heart is now an open door.


The song’s themes follow a universal experience of love and longing. It touches on the idea of keeping inside one’s true feelings of love and how difficult it can be to keep them there. The longing to have your intimate feelings and secrets out in the open, to share and revel in with the one you hold so dearly. In some ways, the Singer is giving into temptation, and it is depicted as an inevitable path for someone who has a secret love. The lyrics carried the idea that the longer the secret love remained hidden, the sweeter the desire to reveal and express it.


Line by Line Meaning

Once I had a secret love that lived within the heart of me,
I used to keep my love hidden inside, it was a secret that I kept in my heart.


All too soon my secret love became impatient to be free.
As time passed, my love became overwhelming and I felt the need to express it openly.


So I asked a friendly star the way that lovers often do
In my search for guidance, I looked up to the stars, hoping for a sign to show me the right way.


Just how wonderful you are and why I'm so in love with you.
I wanted to know what made you so special and what qualities you possessed that made me fall in love with you.


Now I shout it from the highest hill, even told the golden daffodils,
I am now unashamed and unafraid to express my love for you, I am willing to shout it out loud and even tell the flowers.


And now my heart's an open door, and my secret love's no secret any more.
My heart is now open and my love is no longer a secret, I am free to love you openly and without restraint.




Lyrics © Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: Paul Francis Webster, Sammy Fain

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Mike


on The Lady Is A Champ

eight

She gets too hungry for dinner at eight
She can't eat late and stay up all night, because unlike society types, she has to get up in the morning.

She likes the theatre and never comes late
She cares more about seeing the play than being seen making an entrance.

She never bothers with people she'd hate
Her friends are friends, not social trophies.

Doesn't like crap games with barons or earls
While barrns and earls probably don't play craps, she associates with friends, not people to be seen with.

Won't go to Harlem in ermine and pearls
She doesn't "slum", the practice of the rich in the 30's, when the song was written, of touring poor neighborhoods dressed in rich clothes to "tut, tut" about the deplorable conditions, and congratulate each other for "caring about the poor"

Won't dish the dirt with the rest of the girls
Doesn't trade gossip for acceptance among an in-crowd


She likes the free, fresh wind in her hair
She cares more about how her hair feels than conforming with current hair fashions

Hates California, it's cold and it's damp
Since most of California is noticeably warmer and / or drier than New York, where the play the song was written for is set, this is probably a facetious excuse to like what she likes.


And she won't go to Harlem in Lincoln's or Ford's
Another reference to slumming, but facetious, since Lincolns and Fords were middle-class, not luxury brands when the lyric was written

Anonymous


on Try a Little Tenderness

Here are the correct lyrics

Try A Little Tenderness - Frank Sinatra - Lyrics

Oh she may be weary
Women do get wearied
Wearing that same old shabby dress
And when she’s weary
You try a little tenderness

You know she’s waiting
Just anticipating things she’ll may never possess
While she is without them
Try just a little bit of tenderness

It’s not just sentimental
She has her grieve and her care
And the words that soft and gentle
Makes it easier to bear
You wont regret it
Women don't forget it
Love is their whole happiness
And it’s all so easy
Try a little tenderness

Musical Interlude

And, it’s all so easy
Try a little tenderness

Daniel


on The Way You Look Tonight

I met Frank Jr. in Las Vegas, a real gentleman. RIP you both.

Giorgi Khutashvili


on Theme from New York, New York

)))

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