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I’M Out of the Army Now

When first I doffed my olive drab,
I thought, delightfully though mutely,
“Henceforth I shall have pleasure ab–
Solutely.”
 
Dull with the drudgery of war,
Sick of the name of fighting,
I yearned, I thought, for something more
Exciting.
 
The rainbow be my guide, quoth I;
My suit shall be a brave and proud one
Gay-hued my socks; and oh, my tie
A loud one.
 
For me the theater and the dance;
Primrose the path I would be wending;
For me the roses of romance
Unending.
 
Those were my inner thoughts that day
(And those of many another million)
When once again I should be a
Civilian.
 
I would not miss the o.d.;
(Monotony I didn’t much like)
I would not miss the reveille,
And such the like.
 
I don’t . . . And do I now enjoy
My walks along the primrose way so?
Is civil life the life? Oh, boy,
I’ll say so.
Other works by Franklin Pierce Adams...



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