Lyrics Duck Diving - Pulp
The
Ponds
are
very
big,
so
that
at
one
end
people
bathe
and
at
the
other
end
they
fish.
Old
chaps
with
bald
heads
sit
on
folding
stools
and
fish
with
rods
and
lines,
and
little
kids
squeeze
through
the
railings
and
wade
out
into
the
water
to
fish
with
nets.
But
the
water's
much
deeper
at
our
end
of
the
Ponds,
and
that's
where
we
bathe.
You're
not
allowed
to
bathe
there
unless
you
can
swim;
but
I've
always
been
able
to
swim.
They
used
to
say
that
was
because
fat
floats
- well,
I
don't
mind.
They
call
me
Sausage.
Only,
I
don't
dive
- not
from
any
diving-board,
thank
you.
I
have
to
take
my
glasses
off
to
go
into
the
water,
and
I
can't
see
without
them,
and
I'm
just
not
going
to
dive,
even
from
the
lowest
diving-board,
and
that's
that,
and
they
stopped
nagging
about
it
long
ago.
Then,
this
summer,
they
were
all
on
to
me
to
learn
duck-diving.
You're
swimming
on
the
surface
of
the
water
and
suddenly
you
up-end
yourself
just
like
a
duck
and
dive
down
deep
into
the
water,
and
perhaps
you
swim
about
a
bit
underwater,
and
then
come
up
again.
I
daresay
ducks
begin
doing
it
soon
after
they're
born.
It's
different
for
them.
So
I
was
learning
to
duck-dive
- to
swim
down
to
the
bottom
of
the
Ponds,
and
pick
up
a
brick
they'd
thrown
in,
and
bring
it
up
again.
You
practise
that
in
case
you
have
to
rescue
anyone
from
drowning
- say,
they'd
sunk
for
the
third
time
and
gone
to
the
bottom.
Of
course,
they'd
be
bigger
and
heavier
than
a
brick,
but
I
suppose
you
have
to
begin
with
bricks
and
work
up
gradually
to
people.
The
swimming-instructor
said,
'Sausage,
I'm
going
to
throw
the
brick
in.'
It
was
a
brick
with
a
bit
of
old
white
flannel
round
it,
to
make
it
show
up
under-water.
'Sausage,
I'm
going
to
throw
it
in,
and
you
go
after
it
- go
after
it,
Sausage,
and
get
it
before
it
reaches
the
bottom
and
settles
in
the
mud,
or
you'll
never
get
it.'
He'd
made
everyone
come
out
of
the
water
to
give
me
a
chance,
and
they
were
standing
watching.
I
could
see
them
blurred
along
the
bank,
and
I
could
hear
them
talking
and
laughing;
but
there
wasn't
a
sound
in
the
water
except
me
just
treading
water
gently,
waiting.
And
then
I
saw
the
brick
go
over
my
head
as
the
instructor
threw
it
and
there
was
a
splash
as
it
went
into
the
water
ahead
of
me;
and
I
thought:
I
can't
do
it
- my
legs
won't
up-end
this
time
- they
feel
just
flabby
- they'll
float,
but
they
won't
up-end
- they
can't
up-end
- it's
different
for
ducks...
But
while
I
was
thinking
all
that,
I'd
taken
a
deep
breath,
and
then
my
head
really
went
down
and
my
legs
went
up
into
the
air
- I
could
feel
them
there,
just
air
around
them,
and
then
there
was
water
round
them,
because
I
was
going
down
into
the
water,
after
all.
Right
down
into
the
water;
straight
down...
At
first
my
eyes
were
shut,
although
I
didn't
know
I'd
shut
them.
When
I
did
realize,
I
forced
my
eyelids
up
against
the
water
to
see.
Because,
although
I
can't
see
much
without
my
glasses,
as
I've
said,
I
don't
believe
anyone
could
see
much
under-water
in
those
Ponds;
so
I
could
see
as
much
as
anyone.
The
water
was
like
a
thick
greeny-brown
lemonade,
with
wispy
little
things
moving
very
slowly
about
in
it
- or
perhaps
they
were
just
movements
of
the
water,
not
things
at
all;
l
couldn't
tell.
The
brick
had
a
few
seconds'
start
of
me,
of
course,
but
I
could
still
see
a
whitish
glimmer
that
must
be
the
flannel
round
it:
it
was
ahead
of
me,
fading
away
into
the
lower
water
as
I
moved
after
it.
The
funny
thing
about
swimming
under-water
is
its
being
so
still
and
quiet
and
shady
down
there,
after
all
the
air
and
sunlight
and
splashing
and
shouting
just
up
above.
I
was
shut
right
in
by
the
quiet,
greeny-brown
water,
just
me
alone
with
the
brick
ahead
of
me,
both
of
us
making
towards
the
bottom.
The
Ponds
are
deep,
but
I
knew
they
weren't
too
deep;
and,
of
course,
I
knew
I'd
enough
air
in
my
lungs
from
the
breath
I'd
taken.
I
knew
all
that.
Down
we
went,
and
the
lemonade-look
quite
went
from
the
water,
and
it
became
just
a
dark
blackish-brown,
and
you'd
wonder
you
could
see
anything
at
all.
Especially
as
the
bit
of
white
flannel
seemed
to
have
come
off
the
brick
by
the
time
it
reached
the
bottom
and
I'd
caught
up
with
it.
The
brick
looked
different
down
there,
anyway,
and
it
had
already
settled
right
into
the
mud
- there
was
only
one
corner
left
sticking
up.
I
dug
into
the
mud
with
my
fingers
and
got
hold
of
the
thing,
and
then
I
didn't
think
of
anything
except
getting
up
again
with
it
into
the
air.
Touching
the
bottom
like
that
had
stirred
up
the
mud,
so
that
I
began
going
up
through
a
thick
cloud
of
it.
I
let
myself
go
up
- they
say
fat
floats,
you
know
- but
I
was
shooting
myself
upwards,
too.
I
was
in
a
hurry.
The
funny
thing
was,
I
only
began
to
be
afraid
when
I
was
going
back.
I
suddenly
thought:
perhaps
I've
swum
under-water
much
too
far
- perhaps
I'll
come
up
at
the
far
end
of
the
Ponds
among
all
the
fishermen
and
foul
their
lines
and
perhaps
get
a
fish-hook
caught
in
the
flesh
of
my
cheek.
And
all
the
time
I
was
going
up
quite
quickly,
and
the
water
was
changing
from
brown-black
to
green-brown
and
then
to
bright
lemonade.
I
could
almost
see
the
sun
shining
through
the
water,
I
was
so
near
the
surface.
It
wasn't
until
then
that
I
felt
really
frightened:
I
thought
I
was
moving
much
too
slowly
and
I'd
never
reach
the
air
again
in
time.
Never
the
air
again...
Then
suddenly
I
was
at
the
surface
- I'd
exploded
back
from
the
water
into
the
air.
For
a
while
I
couldn't
think
of
anything,
and
I
couldn't
do
anything
except
let
out
the
old
breath
I'd
been
holding
and
take
a
couple
of
fresh,
quick
ones,
and
tread
water
- and
hang
on
to
that
brick.
Pond
water
was
trickling
down
inside
my
nose
and
into
my
mouth,
which
I
hate.
But
there
was
air
all
round
and
above,
for
me
to
breathe,
to
live.
And
then
I
noticed
they
were
shouting
from
the
bank.
They
were
cheering
and
shouting,
'Sausage!
Sausage!'
and
the
instructor
was
hallooing
with
his
hands
round
his
mouth,
and
bellowing
to
me:
'What
on
earth
have
you
got
there,
Sausage?'
So
then
I
turned
myself
properly
round
- I'd
come
up
almost
facing
the
fishermen
at
the
other
end
of
the
Pond,
but
otherwise
only
a
few
feet
from
where
I'd
gone
down;
so
that
was
all
right.
I
turned
round
and
swam
to
the
bank
and
they
hauled
me
out
and
gave
me
my
glasses
to
have
a
good
look
at
what
I'd
brought
up
from
the
bottom.
Because
it
wasn't
a
brick.
It
was
just
about
the
size
and
shape
of
one,
but
it
was
a
tin
- an
old
tin
box
with
no
paint
left
on
it
and
all
brown-black
slime
from
the
bottom
of
the
Ponds.
It
was
heavy
as
a
brick
because
it
was
full
of
mud.
Don't
get
excited,
as
we
did:
there
was
nothing
there
but
mud.
We
strained
all
the
mud
through
our
fingers,
but
there
wasn't
anything
else
there,
not
even
a
bit
of
old
sandwich
or
the
remains
of
bait.
I
thought
there
might
have
been,
because
the
tin
could
have
belonged
to
one
of
the
old
chaps
that
have
always
fished
at
the
other
end
of
the
Ponds.
They
often
bring
their
dinners
with
them
in
bags
or
tins,
and
they
have
tins
for
bait,
too.
It
could
have
been
dropped
into
the
water
at
their
end
of
the
Ponds
and
got
moved
to
our
end
with
the
movement
of
the
water.
Otherwise
I
don't
know
how
that
tin
box
can
have
got
there.
Anyway,
it
must
have
been
there
for
years
and
years,
by
the
look
of
it.
When
you
think,
it
might
have
stayed
there
for
years
and
years
longer;
perhaps
stayed
sunk
under-water
for
ever.
I've
cleaned
the
tin
up
and
I
keep
it
on
the
mantelpiece
at
home
with
my
coin
collection
in
it.
I
had
to
duck-dive
later
for
another
brick,
and
I
got
it
all
right,
without
being
frightened
at
all;
but
it
didn't
seem
to
matter
as
much
as
coming
up
with
the
tin.
I
shall
keep
the
tin
as
long
as
I
live,
and
I
might
easily
live
to
be
a
hundred
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