| Alone and pointless by her mouldering self
|
| She stares at the tin of sardines on the shelf
|
| By a paraffin lamp in a dingy brown room
|
| Gran sits and broods in the thickening gloom
|
| It’s a gloom that congeals; |
| it’s so greasy and thick
|
| You could cut into strips and roast on a stick
|
| And hand round to friends but there’s nobody there
|
| Just Gran, on her own, in a miserable chair
|
| So don’t point it at me
|
| Point it at Gran
|
| She needs it more than I do
|
| And more than Princess Anne
|
| When Princess Anne’s eighty-two
|
| And living in a one room flat in Hackney
|
| Maybe she could do with a bit as well
|
| Don’t point it at me
|
| Don’t point it at yourself
|
| Just point it at Gran
|
| And the sardines on the shelf
|
| Don’t point it at me
|
| I’ve had more than enough
|
| Just point it at Gran
|
| She could do with plenty of stuff
|
| Don’t point it at me
|
| Point it at Gran
|
| Well, it could be a firehose
|
| Or it could be a flan
|
| Now some people are happy
|
| And some people are bored
|
| And some people are left
|
| And completely ignored
|
| So why should your life end on a dismal note? |