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The People That You Never Get To Love - Susannah McCorkle



     
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The People That You Never Get To Love Lyrics


You? re browsing in a second hand book store
And you see him in non-fiction V-Y
He looks up from world war two
And then you catch him, catch him, catch him in his eyeSo you quickly turn away a wishful stare
And take a sudden interest in your shoes
If you only had the courage but you don? t
And he turns and leaves and you both loseAnd you think about the people that you never get to love
It's not as if you even had the chance
So many worth a second life but rarely do you get a second glance
Until fate cuts in on your dance
And you? ll see him on a train that you just missed
At a bus stop where your bus will never stop
Or in a passing Buick when you? ve been pulled over by a traffic copOr you? ll share an elevator, just you two
And rise in solemn silence to your floor
Like the fool you are, you get off
And he leaves your life behind a closing doorAnd you think about the people that you never get to love
That poem you intended to begin
The saddest that anyone has ever said are? Lord what might have been?

But no one ever said you get to win
Still you? ll never going to miss what you don? t know
And you don? t know who you? ll meet at half past three
It could be a total stranger who looks just a little bit like meOne of the people that you never get to love
One of the people that you never get to love
The people that you never get to love
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Susannah McCorkle (4 January 1946 – 19 May 2001) was an American jazz singer much admired for her direct, unadorned singing style and quiet intensity. McCorkle was born in Berkeley, California. She studied modern languages at the University of California, Berkeley. McCorkle began singing professionally after hearing recordings of Billie Holiday in Paris in the late 1960s. She nearly became an interpreter at the European Commission in Brussels, but moved instead to London in 1972 to pursue a career in singing.

Read more about Susannah Mccorkle on Last.fm.


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Susannah Mccorkle