March Eb6 Ebm Bb C7 Cm7 Smut! Give me Smut and nothing but! A dirty novel I can't shut, F7 Bb6 Bdim F7 Bb7 if it's un-cut! and un-subt---------tle. Eb Bb7 I've never quibbled, if it was ribald, Eb I would de-vour, where others merely nibbled, G7 Cm As the judge remarked the day that he ac-quitted my Aunt Hortense, F7 Bb7 To be smut, it must be utterly with-out redeeming social importense. Eb6 Ebm Bb Por - nographic pictures I a-dore. C7 Cm7 Indecent magazines ga-lore, D7 Gm Bb7 I like them more, If they're hard-core! Eb E F F# (Spoken): Bring on the obscene movies, murals, postcards, neckties, samplers, G Ab A Bb Bb7 Stained glass windows, tatoos, anything! More, More, I'm still not satisfied. Eb Bb7 Eb (Sung)Stories of tortures, used by debauchers, lurid , licentious and vile. Bb7 Eb Bb7 Eb Bb7 Eb Bb7 Make me smile. Novels that pander to my taste for can-dor, Eb Bb7 Eb give me a pleasure sublime. (spoken): Let's face it, I love slime. Eb7 Ab (Sung):All books can be indecent books though recent books are bolder, Eb C7 For filth (I'm glad to say) is in the mind of the be-holder. Fm Db When correctly viewed, Everything is lewd. F7 Bb7 (Spoken): I could tell you things about Peter Pan and the wizard of Oz, there's a dirty old man! Eb6 Ebm Bb C7 Cm7 I thrill to any book like Fannie Hill. And I suppose I always will. F7 Bb6 Bdim F7 Bb7 If it is swill, and really fil - thy. Eb Bb7 Who needs a hobby, like tennis or philately? Eb I've got a hobby: re-reading Lady CHatterly. G7 Cm F7 But now they're trying to take it all a-way from us unless we take a stand, Bb7 and hand in hand we fight for freedom of the press, In other words, Eb6 Ebm Bb C7 Cm7 Smut! Like the adventures of a slut. Oh I'm a market they can't glut. F7 Bb Fm6 G7 I don't know what, compares with Smut. Hip Hip Hoo-ray! C7 Ebm Bb F#7 G7 G37 A7 B7 Bb (Spoken): Let's hear it for the Supreme Court!(Sung)Don't let them take it away.