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Prelude

 In youth I gnawed life's bitter rind
And shared the rugged lot
Of fellows rude and unrefined,
Frustrated and forgot;
And now alas! it is too late
My sorry ways to mend,
So sadly I accept my fate,
A Roughneck to the end.
Profanity is in my voice And slag is in my rhyme, For I have mucked with men who curse And grovel in the grime; My fingers were not formed, I fear, To frame a pretty pen, So please forgive me if I veer From Virtue now and then.
For I would be the living voice, Though raucous is its tone, Of men who rarely may rejoice, Yet barely ever moan: The rovers of the raw-ribbed lands, The lads of lowly worth, The scallywags with scaley hands Who weld the ends of earth.

Poem by Robert William Service
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Book: Shattered Sighs