Lyrics The Ballad of Lucy Jordan - Marianne Faithfull
The
morning
sun
touched
lightly
on
The
eyes
of
Lucy
Jordan
In
a
white
suburban
bedroom
In
a
white
suburban
town
As
she
lay
there
'neath
the
covers
Dreaming
of
a
thousand
lovers
'Till
the
world
turned
to
orange
And
the
room
went
spinning
round
At
the
age
of
thirty-seven
She
realised
she'd
never
Ride
through
Paris
in
a
sports
car
With
the
warm
wind
in
her
hair
So
she
let
the
phone
keep
ringing
And
she
sat
there
softly
singing
Little
nursery
rhymes
she'd
memorised
In
her
daddy's
easy
chair
Her
husband,
he's
off
to
work
And
the
kids
are
off
to
school
And
there
were,
oh,
so
many
ways
For
her
to
spend
the
day
She
could
clean
the
house
for
hours
Or
rearrange
the
flowers
Or
run
naked
through
the
shady
street
Screaming
all
the
way
At
the
age
of
thirty-seven
She
realised
she'd
never
Ride
through
Paris
in
a
sports
car
With
the
warm
wind
in
her
hair
So
she
let
the
phone
keep
ringing
As
she
sat
there
softly
singing
Pretty
nursery
rhymes
she'd
memorised
In
her
daddy's
easy
chair
The
evening
sun
touched
gently
on
The
eyes
of
Lucy
Jordan
On
the
roof
top
where
she
climbed
When
all
the
laughter
grew
too
loud
And
she
bowed
and
curtsied
to
the
man
Who
reached
and
offered
her
his
hand
And
he
led
her
down
to
the
long
white
car
That
waited
past
the
crowd
At
the
age
of
thirty-seven
She
knew
she'd
found
forever
As
she
rode
along
through
Paris
With
the
warm
wind
in
her
hair
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