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Noel Coward - A Bar On The Piccola Marina lyrics
album "Noel Coward At
 Las Vegas"
 SPOKEN: Now I'd like to sing you a new song that I wrote just last
 summer when I was having a holiday on the Island of Capri. Each
 evening I used to sit on the piazza and watch these hordes of middle-
 aged ladies ariving by every boat. Obviously, all set to have
 themselves a ball. So startled was I by this rather macabre spectacle
 that I wrote this song about a respectable English matron, who
 discovered in the nick of time that life was for living.
 I'll sing you a song, it's not very long
 It's moral may disconcert you
 Of a mother and wife who for most of her life
 Was trained for domestic virtue
 She had two strapping daughters and a rather dull son
 And a much duller husband who, at sixty-one
 Elected to retire......and later on expire
 Sing Halleluhua, heigh-nonny-no
 Heigh-nonny-no, heigh-nonny-no
 He joined the feathered choir
 Having laid him to rest by special request
 In a family mausoleum
 As his widow repaired to the home they had shared
 Her heart sang a gay TeDeum
 And then in the middle of the funeral wake
 While adding some liquor to the Tipsy Cake
 She briskly cried "That's done,
 My life's at last begun"
 Sing Halleluhah, heigh-nonny-no
 Heigh-nonny-no, heigh-nonny-no
 "It's time I had some fun"
 Today, though hardly a jolly day
 At least I'll set me free
 We'll all have a lovely holiday
 On the Island of Capri
 In a bar on the Piccola Marina
 Life called to Mrs. Wentworth-Brewster
 Fate beckoned her and introduced herNoel Coward - A Bar On The Piccola Marina - http://motolyrics.com/noel-coward/a-bar-on-the-piccola-marina-lyrics.html
 Into a rather queer, unfamiliar atmosphere
 She'd just sit there, propping up the bar
 Beside a fisherman who sang to a guitar
 When accused of having gone too far
 She made reply "Funiculi, just fancy me, funicula"
 When he bellowed "Que bella Signorina"
 Sheer ecstasy at once produced a wild shriek
 From Mrs. Wentworth-Brewster
 Changing her whole demeanour
 When both her daughters and her son said "Please come home, Mama"
 She answered, rather bibulously "Who do you think you are?"
 Nobody can afford to be so la-di-bloody-da
 In a bar on the Piccola Marina
 Every fisherman cried "Viva, viva and que ragazza
 When she sat on the grand piazza
 Everybody would rise
 Every fisherman cried "Viva, viva, que belle Inglese"
 Someone even said "Whoops-a-daisy"
 Which was quite a surprise
 Each evening, with some light excuse and beaming with goodwill
 She'd just slip into something loose and totter down the hill
 To that bar on the Piccola Marina
 Where love came to Mrs. Wentworth-Brewster
 Hot flushes of delight suffused her
 Right round the bend she went, picture her astonishment
 Day in, day out, she would gad about
 Because she felt she was no longer on the shelf
 Night out, night in, knocking back the gin
 She cried "Funicula, funiculi, funnic-yourself"
 Just for fun, three young sailors from Messina
 Bowed low to Mrs. Wentworth-Brewster
 Said "Scusi", and abruptly goosed her
 Then there was quite a scene
 Her family in floods of tears said "Leave these men, Mama"
 She said, They,re just high-spirited, like all Italians are"
 And most of them have a great deal more to offer than Papa
 In a bar on the Piccola Marina











