These words are transcribed without permission the way they appear in the Smiths' debut album. Additions to the printed lyrics are in darker text while omissions are striken out.
Over the moors, take me to the moors
dig a shallow grave
and I'll lay me down
Over the moor, take me to the moor
dig a shallow grave
and I'll lay me down
Lesley-Anne, with and your pretty white beads
oh John, you'll never be a man
and you'll never see your home again
oh Manchester, so much to answer for
Edward, see those alluring lights?
tonight will be your very last night
a woman said "I know my son is dead
I'll never rest my hands on his sacred head"
Hindley wakes and Hindley says stays:
Hindley wakes, Hindley wakes
Hindley wakes and says:
"Wherever he has gone, I have gone"
But fresh lilaced moorland fields
cannot hide the stolid stench of death
fresh lilaced moorland fields
cannot hide the stolid stench of death
Hindley wakes and Hindley says:
Hindley wakes, Hindley wakes
Hindley wakes and says:
"Whatever he has done, I have done" 1
But this is no easy ride
for a child cries:
"find me... find me, nothing more
we're on a sullen misty moor 2
we may be dead and we may be gone
but we will be, we will be, we will be right by your side
until the day you die
this is no easy ride
we will haunt you when you laugh
yes, you could say we're a team
you might sleep, you might sleep, you might sleep
BUT YOU WILL NEVER DREAM!"
you might sleep
BUT YOU WILL NEVER DREAM!"
you might sleep
BUT YOU WILL NEVER DREAM!"
Oh Manchester, so much to answer for
Oh Manchester, so much to answer for 3
Find me, find me
find me
I'll haunt you when you laugh
I'll haunt you when you laugh
You might sleep
but you will, you will never dream
Over the moors, I'm on the moor
Over the moor
the child is on the moor
"There was all that fuss about 'Suffer Little Children' in the newspapers, all these comments and opinions from people who knew nothing about the group and nothing about music. I felt very sad and angry about that, so much just being headlines. Nobody had approached me and there were long, inflated comments, "Morrissey says this..." and "Morrissey wrote it for this reason...". All of it was totally untrue and I couldn't understand why nobody had asked me. At one point, someone from The Daily Mail rang up, giving me the chance to give my side of the story. Of course, they weren't interested that I got on famously with the parents of the victims. So, they wouldn't print the story. Well, that really upset me."
- Morrissey on the "Suffer Little Children" controversy, Jamming!, December 1984