paroles de chanson A Bar on the Piccola Marina - Noël Coward
Now
I
should
like
to
sing
you
a
new
song
that
I
wrote
only
just
last
Year
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
British
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
famed
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
the
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
has
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
her
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
merely
cried
"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
sighed
"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
"Hurrah,
Funiculi,
funicula,
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
cried
"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
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