Rudyard Kipling - If
Written: ca. 1895 in ‘Brother Square-Toes’—Rewards and Fairies
Theme and Story:
In his autobiography Something of Myself (1937), Kipling claimed that the phrase "If—" had its beginnings in the unsuccessful Jameson raid of 1895–1896, which was when British colonial statesman Leander Starr Jameson led an attack against the South African (Boer) Republic during the New Year weekend. Jameson wanted to trigger his fellow British citizens in the Transvaal to rebel against the Boer administration, but they were unwilling to do so. Instead, Jameson's poorly executed military action contributed to the environment that, a few years later, would spark the Second Boer War. Kipling knew Jameson, and recorded in Something of Myself: ‘Among the verses in Rewards was one set called “If” …
They were based on Jameson's persona and provided advice that was ideal and simple to impart. The Jameson raid's influence on "If" might easily be overstated, and it appears that Kipling's (posthumously published) memoir is the first place this connection is brought up.
If—should first and foremost be interpreted as a poem addressed to a younger man, listing the qualities a man should acquire or cultivate in order to be a paragon of manly virtue. The poem's final words, "you'll be a man, my son," suggest that the poem is addressed to Kipling's actual son.
(source: Link)
Poem:
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