| I drive alone, home from work
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| And I always think of her
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| Late at night I call her
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| But I never say a word
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| And I can see her squeeze the phone between her chin and shoulder
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| And I can almost smell her breath faint with a sweet scent of decay
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| She serves him mashed potatoes
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| And she serves him peppered steak, with corn
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| Pulls her dress up over her head
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| Lets it fall to the floor
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| And does she ever whisper in his ear all her favorite fruit
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| And all the most exotic places they are cultivated
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| And I’d like to take her there, rather than this train
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| And if I weren’t a civil servant, I’d have a place in the colonies
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| We’d play croquet behind white-washed walls and drink our tea at four
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| Within intervention’s distance of the embassy
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| The midday air grows thicker with the heat
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| And drifts towards the line of trees
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| Where negroes blink their eyes, they sink into siesta
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| And we are rotting like a fruit underneath a rusting roof
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| We dream our dreams and sing our songs of the fecundity of life and love
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| Of life and love
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| Of life and love |