|
I Get Along Without You Very Well
|
Jimmy Dorsey
|
Words by Jane Brown thompson and music by Hoagy Carmichael.
|
|
Composed by Carmichael several years after being given Mrs. Thompson's
|
unsigned poem by a student at Indiana University. After an extensive
|
search, the author was located but she died the night before the song was
|
introduced by Dick Powell on a network radio program.
|
Sung by Hoagy Carmichael and Jane Russell in the 1952 film "The Las Vegas
|
Story."
|
|
I get along without you very well,
|
Of course I do;
|
Except when soft rains fall and drip from leaves,
|
Then I recall the thrill of being sheltered in your arms,
|
Of course I do.
|
But I get along without you very well.
|
I've forgotten you, just like I should,
|
Of course I have;
|
Except to hear your name
|
Or someone's laugh that is the same.
|
But I've forgotten you just like I should,
|
What a guy!
|
What a fool am I to think my breaking heart
|
Could kid the moon.
|
What's in store?
|
Should I 'phone once more?
|
No it's best that I stick to my tune.
|
I get along without you very well,
|
Of course I do;
|
Except perhaps in spring,
|
But I should never think of spring
|
For that would surely break my heart in two.
|
|
|
|
-----------------
|
I Get Along Without You Very Well
|
Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra |