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				Title:     Till Twiston Went 
			    
Author: Christopher Morley [
More Titles by Morley]		                
			    
Till Twiston went, the war still seemed
    A far-off thing: a nightmare dreamed,
    Some bruit or fable half-believed,
    Too hideous to be conceived.
    His letter came: the memories throng
    Of days that made the friendship strong--
    The oar he won, the ties he wore,
    His love of china, fairy lore,
    (And flappers); and his honest eyes;
    His stammer, his absurdities;
    His marmalade, his bitter beer,
    And all that made him quaint and dear.
    And though we muckle have to do
    Yet love must needs come breaking through,
    And now and then the office hum
    Dies like a mist, ... and there will come
    An Oxford breakfast scene: the quad
    All blue and grey outside--O God--
    And there sits Twiston at the feast
    Proclaiming he will be a priest!
    I see his eyes, his homely neb--
    Ring, telephones, and cut the web!
    And when it's over, will there be
    In his grey house above the Dee
    A mug to drain? Will we renew
    The dreams of all we hoped to do?
    Our Cotswold tramps? And will there still
    Be flappers in the surf at Rhyl?
    O how I counted on the hour
    When he would see the Woolworth Tower,
    And how we set our hearts upon
    The steep grey walls of Carcassonne!
[The end]
Christopher Morley's poem: Till Twiston Went
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