His keeping busier as bitter storms
His imaginations and his palindromes
It was anything but hear the voice
Anything but hear the voice
It was anything but hear the voice
That says that we're all basically alone

Poor Professor Pension had only good intentions
When he put his Bunsen burners all away
And turned into a playground a Petri dish
Of single cells would swing their fists at anything
That looks like easy prey in this

Nature show that rages every day
It was bound, a part his intuition say
We were all basically alone

And despite what all his studies had shown
What was mistaken for closeness, was just a case of mitosis
Weighed deception or mercy while others train for the show
And tell me doctor can you pull my file
?Cause he just wants to know the reason, the reason why

Why do they congregate in groups of four
Scatter like a billion spores
And let the wind just carry them away?
How can cutes be so mean

Our famous doctor tried to gleam
As he went home at the end of the day
In this Nature show that rages every day
It was bound apart his intuition, say

We were all basically all alone
Despite what all his studies had shown
What was mistaken for closeness, was just a case of mitosis
She fatal doses, malcontent to osmosis
Weighed deception or mercy while others are paying for the shot
Well, tell me doctor can you pull my file, reason why


Lyrics submitted by emhass

Imitosis Lyrics as written by Andrew Wegman Bird

Lyrics © Wixen Music Publishing

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Imitosis song meanings
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48 Comments

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  • +2
    General Comment

    Huh. I always heard it as "Poor Professor Pension," rather than Pynchon, but Pynchon does make sense, from what I gather in the comments here. For me, "Pension" carried with it a tone of poverty, aimlessness, a disconnect from society (if you're on a pension you no longer need to contribute to society to get paid), and the end of one's life/closeness of death, which I thought fit in well with the theme of the song.

    I haven't read Pynchon.

    thriggleon December 21, 2008   Link

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