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Mumford & Sons - The Wolf

Wide eyed, with a heart made full of fright

Your eyes follow like traces in the night

A tight rope, that you wander every time

You have been weighed you have been found wanting

 

Been wandering for days

How you felt me slip your mind

Leave behind your wanton ways

I wanna learn to love in kind

Because you're all I ever longed for

 

You tilt her

You better keep the wolf back from the door

He wanders ever closer every night

And how he waits, baying for blood

I promise you everything will be fine

 

Been wandering for days

How you felt me slip your mind

Leave behind your wanton ways

I wanna learn to love in kind

Because you're all I ever longed for

 

Hold my gaze love

You know I want to let it go

We will stand down

In the wonder of it all

 

And I will hold you in

And I will hold you in

 

Been wandering for days

How you felt me slip your mind

Leave behind your wanton ways

I wanna look you in the eye

Because you're all I ever longed for

 

Been wandering for days

How you felt me slip your mind

Leave behind your wanton ways

I wanna learn to love in kind

Because you're all I ever longed for

 

Read more: Mumford & Sons - The Wolf Lyrics | MetroLyrics

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What does “The Wolf” mean?

 

After a quick listen to and read of the lyrics, I was confused. There’s a lot going on, and there are few specific details to give us context. So, let’s go with what we do know.

 

1. Marcus is singing to someone going through a difficult time. This person is “[w]ide eyed” and has “been weighed” but “found wanting.”

 

2. This person is searching for something or someone. Marcus sings, “You’ve been wandering for days,” and remembers “[h]ow you felt me slip your mind.” This person seems to have been a friend of Marcus’s but left and now has tried to make his/her own path, forgetting Marcus, but not being able to succeed in what he/she set out to do.

 

3. Marcus loves (or feels very strong brotherly affection) towards this person. He sings, “[Y]ou were all I ever longed for.”

 

4. Marcus is trying to protect his person. The titular wolf is trying to get into a shelter where Marcus and this person wait, hoping to survive. Marcus promises his friend that everything will “be fine.”

 

Screen Shot of Mumford & Sons Website II

Screen Shot of Mumford & Sons Website II

 

 

 

The questions we are left with:

 

Who/what is the shelter?

 

What is Mumford’s relationship with this other person?

 

Why did the other person leave?

 

What does the wolf represent?

 

Why does Mumford want this person so badly?

 

And, honestly, I’m not completely sure how to answer all of these. Mumford gives away few details. That being said, I do have a strong guess, and if you disagree with my interpretation, you can let me know, and we’ll talk about it.

 

Screen Shot of Mumford & Sons Album Cover

Screen Shot of Mumford & Sons Album Cover

 

“The Meaning”

 

Mumford’s been pretty popular in Christian blog circles over the years because of clear (but not preachy) references to his faith and faith in general in his lyrics. A lot of his songs contain clever allusions to Christianity. And “The Wolf” is no exception; I count at least three blatant references that give this song a distinctly religious feel.

 

In the first verse of “The Wolf,” he alludes to Daniel 5:27, where God’s hand appears before the king of Babylon to tell him that he has “been weighed” and “found wanting.” This early allusion may support an overall religious interpretation of the song.

 

And if so, then the wolf could be an allusion to sin, the devil, or dangers in life. John 10:12 alludes to a wolf who “scatters the sheep.” Jesus is the “good shepherd” in Christian theology, so perhaps the devil is the wolf that attempts to destroy Jesus’ flock.

 

The shelter that Mumford refers to in verse 2 could be Christ. Psalms 31:20 (and many others) refer to God’s sheltering of his people. Psalms 46:1 and others refer to God as a refuge (basically a shelter).

 

If this other person has “been weighed” and “found wanting,” he/she is sinful and they’ve left Mumford when he tries to bring him/her to Christ. This person is now vulnerable to wolf’s attacks and requires protection. The “tightrope that you wander every time” is this person trying to live life without faith.

 

In verse 2, when Mumford is telling the shelter to keep the wolf out, he seems to be praying and wishing that he could telling his friend that taking refuge in Christ will keep death from devouring him/her.

 

In the bridge, Mumford talks about how if his friend would come back, then they together could “stand out at the wonder of it all,” which could be a reference to the peace felt when living in the way of Jesus and the Bible. Mumford repeats, “And I will hold you in.” He longs for the satisfaction of knowing that his friend is safe from the wolf and from his/her wanderings.

 

In total, this song is about Mumford wishing that he could save his friend who has wandered away from him and from faith and is in danger of being devoured by the devil or death and sin. Mumford longs to bring his friend back with a passion that could break listeners’ hearts and brings to mind James 5:19-20, which references the fact that brining a person back to Christ “covers over a multitude of sins.”

 

If you hear the song differently or want to continue the conversation, please comment below or contact me personally. And don’t forget to follow me on the right side of this site or through my weekly mailing list or on Twitter!

 

P.S. Does anyone think this was actually about a romantic relationship?

 

P.P.S. You can buy The Wolf on Amazon if you want to continue listening.

 

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Uploaded on April 22, 2015
Taken on April 22, 2015