Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song Chocolate, artist - Tindersticks.
Date of issue: 16.02.2012
Song language: English
Chocolate |
It had been the perfect Friday afternoon, |
the job was almost done. |
The house we were decorating was owned by a little old man, |
forever in the same three piece suit he’d probabbly had since he was demobbed. |
He seemed to be forever on his way to the post office, |
carrying brown paper ansd string wrapped parcels under his arm. |
He’d bring us out china cups of camp coffee and plates of custard cream |
biscuits. |
The house had belonged to his parents who had both passed away within weeks of |
each other, a few years back. |
They were the only people he had ever lived with, this was the only house he |
had ever lived in. |
I wondered what would happen to the house when he’s gone. |
It was a short walk to my bedsit, once a similar house to the old man’s, |
now broken into lots of single room accomodation. |
It also once had a great garden like his, now occupied by one-storey modern |
block building, containing the dentist and chiropodist. |
In my room was an electric cooker, which I only used in winter to keep warm, |
next to that was a sink with a glass shelf above it, on which was a toothbrush |
and carton of marlboro’s. |
There was a table with a chair in one corner, a single bed in the other, |
and about four sq ft in the middle. |
There was a wooden drawer under the bed with most of my clothes in, |
the rest was over the back of the chair. |
I had a record player on a table and boxes of records underneath. |
The bathroom for the first and the second floor was opposite my room, |
it had a meter for the water which took two 50pence pieces, you’d have to wait |
half an hour for the water to heat up, and keep an eye on the door in case some |
sod pinched your bath. |
There was one toilet upstairs and one outside, but no one used the outside one |
anymore, so it was where the local prostitutes would take their clients for a |
quickie. |
I’d spend as little time as I could in my room, my skin was still warm and soft |
from the bath as I walked into town. |
So I was sat on my usual bar stool in my usual pub by 6.30, the usual twelve or |
so regulars in at this time of the evening, nice and relaxed before the post 8. |
00 crush, we’d crowd around the tiny bar then pool tables, the house rule for |
fool was winner stays on, you’d chalk your name on the balckboard, |
and wait your turn. |
The challenger would pay for the game, so if you were good, |
you 'd play all night. |
Tonight I was great. |
She walked into the pool room just as I potted the black, the next name on the |
list, bent down to the slot on the table and put coins in. |
I was used to seeing her surrounded by burgundy flocked wallpaper and red |
velvet upholstery in the sunday night pub around the corner; |
she looked |
different stood here in the pool room, she looked good, she was looking at me. |
I ended the game as quickly as I could, without losing badly and stood near her. |
«Would you like a drink?», she asked. |
«I get them. |
What do you want?"I replied. |
«The same as you’re having», she said. |
The great thing about being a regular when the bars turned deep is it only |
takes a raised eyebrow and a couple of nods, and two bottles of Holster Pils |
had been passed over people’s heads to you. |
We did the pool room dance for a |
while, moving to"excuse me"'s bending around elbows and pool cues until we |
decided to move on |
It was too early to go to the club, so we went around the corner to the Sunday |
night pub. |
It was still quite busy on a Friday night, full of couples and |
students. |
It had a reputation as a gay bar, probably why the students came in, |
to feel safe. |
She was my dream, we drank pernod and blacks, talked about John Barry, |
Ford Cortinas (she preferred the Mark 3), what was best: gel or Brylcream? |
I preferred the Brylcream. |
She even agreed On Her Majesty’s Secret Service was the best Bond film, |
if you accept it as a whole and not just get hung up about George Lazenby. |
She smoked Silkcuts, she didn’t mind Marlboros, but we both had a fondness for |
Old Port cigars |
We moved down to the club. |
Upstairs for a couple of onion bhajis went down to |
the quiet bar, near the dance floors. |
We decided to leave early, you wouldn’t want to be there in the end, |
when the lights came on. |
You’d never sit down in here again. |
In a depressing |
shuffle we pushed to the door, now it was good to get up and out, |
while it was still a black hole, warm, and smokey, full of possibilities… |
She lived by the river, the other side of town, queue for taxis was hell as |
usual, next to the late night chippy, the worst chips you could buy, |
but at this time of night, full. |
Outside fights and throwing up. |
We jumped in the taxi, nothing mattered but us. |
Back at hers, a bedsit in a house similar to mine, she’d done something, |
painted three walls, put up some old fifties star wall paper, a big Bowie |
poster and some nice curtains, it would be easy for me to change my woodchip |
magnolia bedsit standard. |
Afterall, it was my job. |
She had a few lamps here and |
there were some candles. |
She made us proper hot chocolate, not the instant shit |
you get from the machine. |
She had Fox’sbiscuits and a small bottle of Cointreau, |
too. |
The end of a perfect day. |
The taste of chocolate, cigarette, |
and orange liqueur made it even seem better. |
I undid her tartan miniskirt, |
pulled off her black wool tights, my lips moved up her legs… What the fuck? |
I had a large hard dick poking me in the eye. |
«Shit! |
you’re a chap! |
«I felt like jumping through the window, screaming, I couldn’t move… |
She… he… still looked the same… I had a pain in my head, I wanted to do |
something, say something… |
He was holding me, sobbing… «you must have known, how could you not tell? |
«And «I love you, I can be your woman…"His eyes were still beautiful, |
deep brown, his lips still chocolatey and orangey. |
«Shit!"I said, «I was never a breast man, anyway…» |