Ere the mother's milk had dried 
  On my lips the Brethren came-- 
Tore me from my nurse's side, 
  And bestowed on me a name 
 
Infamously overtrue-- 
  Such as "Bunny," "Stinker," "Podge";-- 
But, whatever I should do, 
  Mine for ever in the Lodge. 
 
Then they taught with palm and toe-- 
  Then I learned with yelps and tears-- 
All the Armoured Man should know 
  Through his Seven Secret Years... 
 
Last, oppressing as oppressed, 
  I was loosed to go my ways 
With a Totem on my breast 
  Governing my nights and days-- 
 
Ancient and unbribeable, 
  By the virtue of its Name-- 
Which, however oft I fell, 
  Lashed me back into The Game. 
 
And the World, that never knew, 
  Saw no more beneath my chin 
Than a patch of rainbow-hue, 
  Mixed as Life and crude as Sin.
Rudyard Kipling
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-totem/