paroles de chanson Never Any Good - Martin Simpson
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job,
Not
steady
enough
for
the
office,
Not
hard
enough
for
the
hod.
You'd
rather
be
riding
your
Norton
Or
going
fishing
with
your
split
cane
rod.
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job.
When
your
grammar
school
days
were
over,
It
was
nineteen-seventeen,
And
you
did
the
right
and
proper
thing.
You
were
just
eighteen.
You
were
never
mentioned
in
dispatches.
You
never
mentioned
what
you
did
or
saw.
You
were
just
another
keen
young
man
In
the
mud
and
stink
of
war.
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job,
Not
steady
enough
for
the
office,
Not
hard
enough
for
the
hod.
You'd
rather
be
singing
the
Pirate
King,
Or
going
fishing
with
your
split
cane
rod.
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job.
You
came
home
from
the
Great
War
With
the
pips
of
a
captain's
rank.
A
German
officer's
Luger,
And
no
money
in
the
bank.
Your
family
sent
you
down
in
the
coal
mine
To
learn
to
be
captain
there,
But
you
didn't
stand
it
very
long.
You
needed
the
light
and
the
air.
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job,
Not
steady
enough
for
the
office,
Not
hard
enough
for
the
hod.
You'd
rather
be
watching
performers
fly
Or
fishing
with
your
split
cane
rod.
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job.
When
the
second
war
came
along,
You
knew
what
should
be
done.
You
would
re-enlist
to
teach
young
men
The
booby
trap
and
the
gun;
And
they
sent
you
home
to
Yorkshire,
With
a
crew
and
a
Lewis
gun,
So
you
could
save
your
seaside
town
From
the
bombers
of
the
Hun.
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job,
Not
steady
enough
for
the
office,
Not
hard
enough
for
the
hod.
You'd
rather
be
finding
the
nightjar's
nest,
Going
fishing
with
your
split
cane
rod.
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job.
And
when
my
mother
came
to
your
door,
With
a
baby
in
her
arm,
Her
big
hurt
boy
only
nine
years
old,
Trying
to
keep
her
from
harm,
If
you
had
been
a
practical
man,
You
would
have
been
forewarned.
You
would
have
seen
that
it
never
could
work,
And
I
would
have
never
been
born.
There's
no
proper
work
in
your
seaside
town,
So
you
come
here
looking
for
a
job.
You
were
storeman
at
the
power
station
Just
before
I
came
along.
Nobody
talked
about
how
you
quit,
But
I
know
that's
what
you
did.
My
mother
said
you
were
a
selfish
man,
And
I
was
your
selfish
kid.
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job,
Not
steady
enough
for
the
office,
Not
hard
enough
for
the
hod;
And
your
Norton
it
was
soon
gone
Along
with
your
split
cane
rod.
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job.
You
showed
me
eyebright
in
the
hedgerow,
Speedwell
and
travellers
joy.
You
showed
me
how
to
use
my
eyes
When
I
was
just
a
boy;
And
you
taught
me
how
to
love
a
song
And
all
you
knew
of
nature's
ways:
The
greatest
gifts
I
have
ever
known,
And
I
use
them
every
day.
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job,
Not
steady
enough
for
the
office,
maybe,
Not
hard
enough
for
the
hod.
You'd
rather
be
riding
your
Norton
Or
going
fishing
with
your
split
cane
rod.
You
were
never
any
good
with
money.
You
couldn't
even
hold
a
job.
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