You know, I used to call my baby up and we'd get real close just like the telephone was a sofa and our thoughts would mingle And we'd leave our minds wide open like a big window in the evening air, and we'd say "'Hey baby, come on in and help yourself to my soul. ' 'Hey baby, come on in and help yourself to my soul. '" But these days, even saying "'Hello, How are you? ' 'I'm fine, how are you? ' "takes a lot of sweat
Ain't that a shame Ain't that a shame But in Linctus House In my flesh hotel I don't care anymore
You know, my baby and me, as Kimberley would say we'd curl up like two dogs in front of a fire and our eyes would reflect each other in the warm long heat of love Yeah, the warm long heat of love And I would hear the rain falling on the leaves outside I couldn't stand to close the window 'Cos I'd shiver if I left her side But now I'd shake if we should meet And I spend most of my time in the bushes
Ain't that a shame Know what you're doing Ain't that a shame Know what you've done But in Linctus House In my flesh hotel I don't care anymore 'I understand how everything sometimes turns out to be nothing, ' you say But I wonder if you do And if we understood each other, there'd be no need to talk But even that, even talking, is out of reach should I say it with flowers, or should I say it with nails? I'm not the kind to push you around but I don't want to make myself vulnerable And if I was on my knees you'd have a pretty good view of my skull And I happen to know you're carrying a chisel
But in Linctus House In my flesh hotel I don't care anymore, no In Linctus House In my flesh hotel I don't care Ain't that a shame Know what you're doing Ain't that a shame Know what you've done