| The four Fs:
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| Find him, feel him, fuck him, forget him
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| I am a servant, son of servants, I was born to serve
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| But I know this place in life is less than I deserve
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| So I’ve become a trainer not of beasts or birds
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| But the beautiful sister I’ve raised for this from birth
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| Lulu is a match girl and I her matchmaker
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| I’ve taught her all there is to know about the games you can play with fire
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| Taught her to jump through a burning hoop in a rented diamond choker
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| And to balance on her nose the head of a Johannesburg broker
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| At cocktail hour in Mayfair, at an Isle of Dogs boat show
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| Lulu appears in her Dior dress and me in my tuxedo
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| Lulu shuts up and shimmers while I make her name known to
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| Key members of the board of directors of Lonhro
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| So how do find my sister, Mister?
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| Johnson was the first man to become my sister’s customer
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| She met him at a dinner in honour of the brother of the Japanese ambassador
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| He stole the key to the satellite room and next to the computers
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| Telexes and fax machines made love to her
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| Her next conquest was Finlayson, Tory whip from Woking
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| His eyes were icy blue, he was impeccably well-spoken
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| He caught her with his daughter and he got her under torture
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| To confess she’d taught her poker
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| And spanked them both until his pants were soaking
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| So how do you find my sister, Minister?
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| Little by little, man by man, my sister has scaled the peak
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| She gets herself flushed out once a week by a quack down Harley Street
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| I set the prices and balance the books, sisters don’t come cheap
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| It’s a scandal what it costs these days to stop a press leak
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| My sister lives in Knightsbridge now and when I go to visit her
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| I buzz three times on the intercom and say «Lulu, it’s your solicitor»
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| I once walked in and caught her sitting naked on top of Henry Kissinger
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| Take my word or take this Polaroid picture
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| Ladies and gentlemen, Mr Henry Kissinger!
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| They knighted the servant yesterday, today you call me 'Sir'
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| You men who laid my sister I say to you now what you once said to her:
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| (You're surprised to hear me talk this way but stranger things occur)
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| «Kneel before me, kiss it, call me 'Sir!'»
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| «Kneel before me, kiss it, call me 'Sir!'»
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| «Kneel before me, kiss it»
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| «Kneel before me»
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| How do you find my sister, now? |