"My carnivorous young boyfriend" , the narrator tells us, is "putting it in again" when he's "worn out from coming" . He doesn't want to "occupy" himself with women and "neglify" his work at the same time. He tells us that he once failed at his job because he was "hooked on a girl" and didn't do his job well. He's not going to let her do the same thing to him, he tells us. He promises that he'll "start over an work even harder" if she'll help him carry his stuff home. The narrator is all, "Hey, who the hell is you?" , and then he realizes that she's his "girlfriend" and he can't believe that she is his "lover" and not his "fiancée." He tells the narrator to "grab us're in the public" and tells the two of them to be sure that the guy they're with isn't going to leave them alone
"My carnivorous young boyfriend" , the narrator tells us, is "putting it in again" when he's "worn out from coming" . He doesn't want to "occupy" himself with women and "neglify" his work at the same time. He tells us that he once failed at his job because he was "hooked on a girl" and didn't do his job well. He's not going to let her do the same thing to him, he tells us. He promises that he'll "start over an work even harder" if she'll help him carry his stuff home. The narrator is all, "Hey, who the hell is you?" , and then he realizes that she's his "girlfriend" and he can't believe that she is his "lover" and not his "fiancée." He tells the narrator to "grab us're in the public" and tells the two of them to be sure that the guy they're with isn't going to leave them alone