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<h2> The Revelation </h2>
<p><i>The same old sprint in the morning, boys, to the same old din and smut;<br/>
Chained all day to the same old desk, down in the same old rut;<br/>
Posting the same old greasy books, catching the same old train:<br/>
Oh, how will I manage to stick it all, if I ever get back again?</i><br/>
<br/>
We've bidden good-bye to life in a cage, we're finished with pushing a pen;<br/>
They're pumping us full of bellicose rage, they're showing us how to be men.<br/>
We're only beginning to find ourselves; we're wonders of brawn and thew;<br/>
But when we go back to our Sissy jobs,—oh, what are we going to do?<br/>
<br/>
For shoulders curved with the counter stoop will be carried erect and square;<br/>
And faces white from the office light will be bronzed by the open air;<br/>
And we'll walk with the stride of a new-born pride,<br/>
with a new-found joy in our eyes,<br/>
Scornful men who have diced with death under the naked skies.<br/>
<br/>
And when we get back to the dreary grind, and the bald-headed boss's call,<br/>
Don't you think that the dingy window-blind, and the dingier office wall,<br/>
Will suddenly melt to a vision of space, of violent, flame-scarred night?<br/>
Then . . . oh, the joy of the danger-thrill, and oh, the roar of the fight!<br/>
<br/>
Don't you think as we peddle a card of pins the counter will fade away,<br/>
And again we'll be seeing the sand-bag rims, and the barb-wire's misty grey?<br/>
As a flat voice asks for a pound of tea, don't you fancy we'll hear instead<br/>
The night-wind moan and the soothing drone of the packet that's overhead?<br/>
<br/>
Don't you guess that the things we're seeing now<br/>
will haunt us through all the years;<br/>
Heaven and hell rolled into one, glory and blood and tears;<br/>
Life's pattern picked with a scarlet thread, where once we wove with a grey<br/>
To remind us all how we played our part in the shock of an epic day?<br/>
<br/>
Oh, we're booked for the Great Adventure now,<br/>
we're pledged to the Real Romance;<br/>
We'll find ourselves or we'll lose ourselves somewhere in giddy old France;<br/>
We'll know the zest of the fighter's life; the best that we have we'll give;<br/>
We'll hunger and thirst; we'll die . . . but first—<br/>
we'll live; by the gods, we'll live!<br/>
<br/>
We'll breathe free air and we'll bivouac under the starry sky;<br/>
We'll march with men and we'll fight with men,<br/>
and we'll see men laugh and die;<br/>
We'll know such joy as we never dreamed; we'll fathom the deeps of pain:<br/>
But the hardest bit of it all will be—when we come back home again.<br/>
<br/>
<i>For some of us smirk in a chiffon shop,<br/>
and some of us teach in a school;<br/>
Some of us help with the seat of our pants to polish an office stool;<br/>
The merits of somebody's soap or jam some of us seek to explain,<br/>
But all of us wonder what we'll do when we have to go back again.</i><br/></p>
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