If I’m ever to show my face in society again I’ve got to find a new cause of my own, and quickly! Come, come, any ideas? Daisy Greville has the old Lady Sitwell has the blind And the fund for sailors' widows? That’s the two of them combined Night school for the nervous? Lady Beach and Margaret Guest Crutches for the crippled? That was Elsie Pond's bequest Wayward women? Daisy Greville Who’s behind disfigured men? Daisy Greville And the deaf? Don’t tell me--it’s Greville yet again Everyone’s got something Can’t you see why I’m bereft? I want to do some good, but what the devil’s left? What the devil’s left? If I may, your Ladyship One hears about such terrible poverty in Egypt these days Egypt Land of the Pharaohs and of Moses the Israelite Home to the Great Pyramids and the Sphinx That's it! We’ll populate an orphanage in Cairo With foundlings from the reeds along the Nile To watch a creature grow, to swaddle it and know The joy of its pathetic little smile Its little smile The news will travel soon enough to London To London Our selflessness will meet with great acclaim Huzzah! The sniping will be stilled And the empire will be filled With homes for bastard children in my name All aboard the Luxor express to Cairo! And off she went. What I'd failed to tell Her was that a violent uprising against the empire was imminent And no British citizen was considered safe So you can imagine my surprise When Lady Hyacinth returned to London, quite unharmed Oh, where will my largesse be truly appreciated? I need a place so low that hope itself has been abandoned! You’ve heard, of course, of the untouchables in India? India Land of Hindus and Muslims, of tamarind and saffron Exotic and unknowable That's it! We’ll find ourselves some lepers in the Punjab The hopeless and the wretched and the cursed Forgotten and unblessed Unblessed I’ll take them to my breast Your breast If Daisy Greville doesn’t get there first When we arrive, they’ll hobble out to greet us Hello there Their toothless grins would melt a heart of stone Ahh And every dilettante Will envy me and want A colony of lepers of her own Now, not a word to even your mothers till we leave, although-- Come to think of it, what is the point of helping others unless you let the whole world know? Call the Times of London! And off she went I'd neglected to mention the malaria pandemic in the Punjab A bit of insurance, in case leprosy itself failed to prove contagious So you can imagine my shock when Lady Hyacinth Returned to London in record time, quite the picture of health I don’t suppose you’d be willing to penetrate the jungle of deepest, darkest Africa Africa From Zululand to Yoruba, home of proud warriors Their naked torsos rippling in the firelight! We’ll civilize a village in the jungle The jungle It can’t take long to learn their mother tongue Not long then Of words, they have but six And five of them are clicks And all of them are different words for dung And can’t you see their frightful painted faces Their faces They’ll teach us how to swing from vine to vine From vine to vine to vine It’s Daisy Greville’s loss She’ll never come across A tribe of backward natives worse than mine The Hottentots and Pygmies may appall us But even they are part of God’s design Ahhh We bid you all goodbye Goodbye Let all of London try To find a tribe of natives worse than mine Charity toward others is divine Divine, divine, divine, divine, charity is divine