Title:
1The White Mans Burden
2The White Mans Burdenby Rudyard Kipling
Take up the White Mans 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.
3The White Mans Burdenby Rudyard Kipling
Take up the White Mans 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 anothers
profit And work another's gain.
4The White Mans Burdenby Rudyard Kipling
Take up the White Mans 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 nought.
5The White Mans Burdenby Rudyard Kipling
Take up the White Mans 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.
6The White Mans Burdenby Rudyard Kipling
Take up the White Mans 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?
7The White Mans Burdenby Rudyard Kipling
Take up the White Mans 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.
8The White Mans Burdenby Rudyard Kipling
Take up the White Mans 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.
9Interpretations
- A straightforward analysis of the poem might
conclude that Kipling presents a Eurocentric view
of the world, in which non-European cultures are
seen as childlike and demonic. This view proposes
that white people consequently have an obligation
to rule over, and encourage the cultural
development of, people from other ethnic and
cultural backgrounds until they can take their
place in the world by fully adopting Western ways.
10Interpretations
- The term the white mans burden can be
interpreted simply as racist, or taken as a
metaphor for a condescending view of non-Western
national culture and economic traditions,
identified as a sense of European ascendancy
which has been called cultural imperialism. A
parallel can also be drawn with the philanthropic
view, common in Kiplings formative years, that
the rich have a moral obligation to help the poor
better themselves whether the poor want the
help or not.
11Interpretations
- Within a historical context, the poem clarifies
the prevalent attitudes that allowed colonialism
to proceed. Although a belief in the virtues of
empire was wide-spread at the time, many
dissented, most notably Mark Twain and Henry
James. Much of Kiplings other writing does
suggest that he genuinely believed in the
beneficent role which the introduction of
Western ideas could play in lifting non-Western
peoples out of poverty and ignorance.
12Interpretations
- Lines 3-5, and other parts of the poem suggest
that it is not just the native people who are
enslaved, but also the functionaries of empire,
who are caught in colonial service. This theme
may also be contrasted with the Christian
missionary movement, which was also quite active
at the time in Africa, India, and other British
and European colonies (e.g. the Christian and
Missionary Alliance).
13Interpretations
- Some commentators point to Kiplings history of
satirical writing, and suggest that The White
Mans Burden is in fact meant to satirically
undermine imperialism.