Evaluating the Evidence 24.2: The White Man’s Burden

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The White Man’s Burden

When it was first published in an American illustrated magazine aimed at the middle class in 1899, Rudyard Kipling’s well-known poem was read as encouragement for U.S. occupation of the Philippines in the aftermath of the Spanish-American War. It has since been understood as a forceful if somewhat anxious justification for Western imperialism in general.

Take up the White Man’s Burden —

Send forth the best ye breed —

Go, bind your sons to exile

To serve your captive’s 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 nought.

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 those ye humor

(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.

EVALUATE THE EVIDENCE

  1. What, exactly, is the “white man’s burden”? What, according to Kipling, are the costs and rewards of undertaking the “civilizing mission”?
  2. Kipling’s famous poem is over one hundred years old. Are its assertions for the legitimacy of “westernization” outdated, or do they still have resonance in today’s global world?

Source: Reprinted in “The White Man’s Versus the Brown Man’s Burden,” The Literary Digest, vol. 18, no. 8 (New York: Funk and Wagnalls, 1899), p. 219.