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				Title:     In The Neolithic Age 
			    
Author: Rudyard Kipling [
More Titles by Kipling]		                
			    
In the Neolithic Age savage warfare did I wage
 For food and fame and woolly horses' pelt;
 I was singer to my clan in that dim, red Dawn of Man,
 And I sang of all we fought and feared and felt.
 Yea, I sang as now I sing, when the Prehistoric spring
 Made the piled Biscayan ice-pack split and shove;
 And the troll and gnome and dwerg, and the Gods of Cliff and Berg
 Were about me and beneath me and above.
 But a rival, of Solutr]/e, told the tribe my style was _outr]/e_ --
 'Neath a tomahawk of diorite he fell.
 And I left my views on Art, barbed and tanged, below the heart
 Of a mammothistic etcher at Grenelle.
 Then I stripped them, scalp from skull, and my hunting dogs fed full,
 And their teeth I threaded neatly on a thong;
 And I wiped my mouth and said, "It is well that they are dead,
 For I know my work is right and theirs was wrong."
 But my Totem saw the shame; from his ridgepole shrine he came,
 And he told me in a vision of the night: --
 "There are nine and sixty ways of constructing tribal lays,
 And every single one of them is right!"
 . . . . .
 Then the silence closed upon me till They put new clothing on me
 Of whiter, weaker flesh and bone more frail;
 And I stepped beneath Time's finger, once again a tribal singer
 [And a minor poet certified by Tr--ll].
 Still they skirmish to and fro, men my messmates on the snow,
 When we headed off the aurochs turn for turn;
 When the rich Allobrogenses never kept amanuenses,
 And our only plots were piled in lakes at Berne.
 Still a cultured Christian age sees us scuffle, squeak, and rage,
 Still we pinch and slap and jabber, scratch and dirk;
 Still we let our business slide -- as we dropped the half-dressed hide --
 To show a fellow-savage how to work.
 Still the world is wondrous large, -- seven seas from marge to marge, --
 And it holds a vast of various kinds of man;
 And the wildest dreams of Kew are the facts of Khatmandhu,
 And the crimes of Clapham chaste in Martaban.
 Here's my wisdom for your use, as I learned it when the moose
 And the reindeer roared where Paris roars to-night: --
 There are nine and sixty ways of constructing tribal lays,
 And -- every -- single -- one -- of -- them -- is -- right!
[The end]
Rudyard Kipling's poem: In The Neolithic Age
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