HistoryWiz
Primary Source |
The
White Man's Burden
by
Rudyard Kipling
McClure's
Magazine, 1899
Nobel
Prize winner 1907 |
 |
- Take
up the White Man's burden--
- Send
forth the best ye breed--
- Go,
bind your sons to exile
- To
serve your captives' need;
- To
wait, in heavy harness,
- On
fluttered folk and wild--
- Your
new-caught sullen peoples,
- Half
devil and half child.
- Take
up the White Man's burden--
- In
patience to abide,
- To
veil the threat of terror
- And
check the show of pride;
- By
open speech and simple,
- An
hundred times made plain,
- To
seek another's profit
- And
work another's gain.
- Take
up the White Man's burden--
- The
savage wars of peace--
- Fill
full the mouth of Famine,
- And
bid the sickness cease;
- And
when your goal is nearest
- (The
end for others sought)
- Watch
sloth and heathen folly
- Bring
all your hope to naught.
- Take
up the White Man's burden--
- No
iron rule of kings,
- But
toil of serf and sweeper--
- The
tale of common things.
- The
ports ye shall not enter,
- The
roads ye shall not tread,
- Go,
make them with your living
- And
mark them with your dead.
- Take
up the White Man's burden,
- And
reap his old reward--
- The
blame of those ye better
- The
hate of those ye guard--
- The
cry of hosts ye humour
- (Ah,
slowly!) toward the light:--
- "Why
brought ye us from bondage,
- Our
loved Egyptian night?"
- Take
up the White Man's burden--
- Ye
dare not stoop to less--
- Nor
call too loud on Freedom
- To
cloak your weariness.
- By
all ye will or whisper,
- By
all ye leave or do,
- The
silent sullen peoples
- Shall
weigh your God and you.
- Take
up the White Man's burden!
- Have
done with childish days--
- The
lightly-proffered laurel,
- The
easy ungrudged praise:
- Comes
now, to search your manhood
- Through
all the thankless years,
- Cold,
edged with dear-bought wisdom,
- The
judgment of your peers.
Part
of Uncle Sam Plants the
Flag: Imperialism in Latin America Exhibit
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