(CN.C.)Wait, do you see my heart on my sleeve?
It’s been there for days on end and it’s been wait ing for you to o pen up yours too, ba by.
Come on now, I’m try ing to tell you just how I’d like to hear the words roll out of your mouth fi nal ly.
Say that it’s al ways been me that’s made you (D)feel a (Em)way you’ve (D)nev er felt be fore.
And I’m (D)all you (Em)need and that you’d (D)nev er want more.
Then (D)you’d say (Em)all of the right things with out a (G)clue.
(D)But you’d save the (Em7)best for last like, I’m the one for you.
You should (D)know that you’re (Em)just a (F#m)tem po rar y (G)fix.
This is not (D)root ed with (Em)you, it don’t (F#m)mean that much to (G)me.
You’re just a (D)fill er in the (Em)space that (F#m)hap pened to be (G)free.
How (D)dare you think you’d (Em)get a way with (F#m)try ing to play (G)me.
This page shows “Best For Last” by Adele in our color-coded kid songbook view — every note is colored by pitch (red C, orange D, yellow E, green F, blue G, purple A, pink B) and the lyrics sit directly under each note, so children can sing along while they play. The song is in the key of D at 92 BPM, a slightly more challenging arrangement — practice each phrase slowly first.