| In the later forties
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| When Diddy Levine lived with Eunice King
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| He gave her the ring that she wore
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| Janice the smiling daughter
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| Who came from a marriage way before
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| But Eunice was the father that she always saw
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| Though they never never never never told her
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| She always knew the score
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| You see kids were so much wiser after the wars
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| But Diddy hadn’t have enough
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| She had to get some more
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| On a ration piece of paper, she wrote «Eunice, I’m not sure»
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| And with her child in her arms
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| She went looking for a fling
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| Besides, she didn’t like the name Mrs. King
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| The first time that she heard Damper Dan
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| Was on the radio
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| Crooning at a volume that was way, way down low
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| Diddy was surprised to hear that Damper’s name was Dan
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| Soon after he was a calling
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| And he asked, begged and pleaded for her hand
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| Damper’s heart was dampened
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| When Diddy answered «no, no, no, no, no»
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| But if she changed her mind, she said «Dan, I’ll let you know»
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| With her child in her arms
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| She went looking for man
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| Besides, she didn’t like the name Damper Dan
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| Janice the smiling daughter grew up to be a teenage queen
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| Through all of her mother’s lovers
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| She kept the name Levine
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| Behind the picture house she first made her scene
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| With a boy called Allister
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| Who was dating a friend called Celine
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| And Celine wasn’t mad when Janice came in between
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| But Allister got scared when he heard
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| And he joined the USA Marines
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| Inheritance, you see, runs through every family
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| Who is to say what is to be is any better
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| Over and over it goes, goodness and badness winds blow
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| Over and over, over and over
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| Over and over and over and over and over and over and over
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| The good and the bad winds blow |