Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song Inside Susan, artist - Pulp. Album song Intro: The Gift Recordings, in the genre Иностранный рок
Date of issue: 31.12.1992
Record label: Island, Universal Music Operations
Song language: English
Inside Susan |
Susan catches the bus into town at ten-thirty a.m. She sits on the back seat. |
She looks at the man in front’s head and thinks how his fat wrinkled neck is like a large |
carrot |
sticking out from the collar of his shirt. |
She adds up the numbers on her bus |
ticket to see if they make twenty-one, but they don’t. |
Maybe she shouldn’t bother going |
to school at all, then. |
Her friends will be in the yard with their arms folded on their |
chests, |
shielding their breasts to try and make them look bigger, whilst the boys will |
be too busy |
playing football to notice. |
The bus is waiting on the High Street when suddenly |
it begins |
to rain torrentially and it sounds like someone has emptied about a million |
packets of dried peas on top of the roof of the bus. |
'What if it just keeps raining,'she |
thinks to herself, 'and it was just like being in an aquarium except it was all |
the |
shoppers and office-workers that were floating passed the window instead of fish?' |
She’s still thinking about this when the bus goes passed Caroline Lee’s house |
where there |
was a party last week. |
There were some German exchange students there who were |
very |
mature; |
they all ended up jumping out of the bedroom window. |
One of them tried |
to get her |
to kiss him on the stairs, so she kicked him. |
Later she was sick because she |
drunk too |
much cider. |
Caroline was drunk as well; |
she was pretending she was married to a tall boy |
in glasses, and she had to wear a polo-neck for three days afterwards to cover |
up the |
love-bite on her neck. |
By now the bus is going passed the market. |
Outside is a man who |
spends all day forcing felt-tip pens into people’s hands and then trying to make them pay |
for them. |
She used to work in the pet shop, but she got sacked for talking to boys when |
she was supposed to be working. |
She wasn’t too bothered though, she hated the |
smell of the |
rabbits anyway. |
'Maybe this bus won’t stop,'she thinks, 'and I’ll stay on it until I’m old enough to go into pubs on my own. |
Or it could drive me to a town where |
people with black hair drink Special Brew and I can make lots of money by charging fat old |
men five pounds a time to look up my skirt. |
Oh, they’ll be queuing up to take |
me out to dinner…'I suppose you think she’s just a silly girl with stupid ideas, but I remember her in those days. |
They talk about people with a fire within and all |
that stuff, |
well, she had that alright. |
It’s just that no-one dared to jump into her fire; |
they would |
have been consumed. |
Instead, they put her in a corner and let her heat up the |
room, |
warming their hands and backsides in front of her, and then slagging her off |
around town. |
No-one ever really got inside Susan, and, and, she always ended up getting off |
the bus at the terminus and then walking home. |