| Sand bags, wind bags, camels with a hump,
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| Fat girls, thin girls, some a little plump,
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| Slave girls sold here, fifty bob a lump,
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| In the old bazaar in Cairo.
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| Brandy, shandy, beer without a froth,
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| Braces, laces, a candle for the moth.
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| Bet you’d look a smasher in an old loin cloth,
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| In the old bazaar in Cairo.
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| You can buy most anything,
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| Thin bulls, fat cows, a little bit of string,
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| You can purchase anything you wish,
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| A clock, a dish and something for your Auntie Nellie,
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| Harem, scarem, what d’ya think of that,
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| Bare knees, striptease, dancing on the mat,
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| Umpa! |
| Umpa! |
| That’s enough of that,
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| In the old bazaar in Cairo.
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| Rice pud, very good, what’s it all about,
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| Made it in a kettle and they couldn’t get it out,
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| Everybody took a turn to suck it through the spout,
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| In the old bazaar in Cairo.
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| Mamadan, Ramadan, everything in style,
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| Genuine, beduine carpet with a pile,
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| Funny little odds and ends floating down the Nile,
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| From the old bazaar in Cairo.
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| You can buy most anything,
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| Sheeps eyes, sand pies, a watch without a spring,
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| You can buy a pomegranate too,
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| A water-bag, a little bit of hokey pokey,
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| Yashmaks, pontefracts, what a strange affair,
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| Dark girls, fair girls, some with ginger hair,
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| The rest of it is funny but they censor it out there,
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| In the old bazaar in Cairo. |