But I still feel Morrissey's humour is present. It's about someone whose
pain and misery originates from being ugly (her pasty face), not from existential pain.
The singer wants to help her, but he cannot possibly go physical. She just
wants someone, but no one is interested by far, except the singer, who has words for her, but nothing more than that. The last person on earth turns her down and subsequently she kills herself. (Morrissey as the culprit again)
I can follow you on this one Kay.
But I still feel Morrissey's humour is present. It's about someone whose pain and misery originates from being ugly (her pasty face), not from existential pain. The singer wants to help her, but he cannot possibly go physical. She just wants someone, but no one is interested by far, except the singer, who has words for her, but nothing more than that. The last person on earth turns her down and subsequently she kills herself. (Morrissey as the culprit again)