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The White Man's Burden

"The White Man's Burden" (1899), by Rudyard Kipling, is a poem about the Philippine–American War (1899–1902) that exhorts the United States to assume colonial control of the Filipino people and their country.[1] Originally written to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria (22 June 1897), the jingoistic poem was replaced with the sombre "Recessional" (1897), also a Kipling poem about empire.

The editorial cartoon "'The White Man's Burden' (Apologies to Rudyard Kipling)" shows John Bull (Britain) and Uncle Sam (U.S.) delivering the world's people of colour to civilisation (Victor Gillam, Judge magazine, 1 April 1899). The people in the basket carried by Uncle Sam are labelled Cuba, Hawaii, Samoa, 'Porto Rico', and the Philippines, while the people in the basket carried by John Bull are labelled Zulu, China, India, 'Soudan', and Egypt.

In "The White Man's Burden", Kipling encouraged the American annexation and colonisation of the Philippine Islands, a Pacific Ocean archipelago conquered in the three-month Spanish–American War (1898).[1] As an imperialist poet, Kipling exhorts the American reader and listener to take up the enterprise of empire yet warns about the personal costs faced, endured, and paid in building an empire;[1] nonetheless, American imperialists understood the phrase "the white man's burden" to justify imperial conquest as a civilising mission that is ideologically related to the continental expansion philosophy of manifest destiny of the early 19th century.[2][3][4][5]

History Edit

 
The White Man's Burden: civilising the unwilling savage. (Detroit Journal, 1898)
 
"The White Man's Burden" published in McClure's Magazine, February 1899

"The White Man's Burden" was first published in The Times (London) on 4 February 1899, and in The New York Sun on 5 February 1899.[6] On 7 February 1899, during senatorial debate to decide if the US should retain control of the Philippine Islands and the ten million Filipinos conquered from the Spanish Empire, Senator Benjamin Tillman read aloud the first, the fourth, and the fifth stanzas of Kipling's seven-stanza poem as arguments against ratification of the Treaty of Paris, and that the US should formally renounce claim of authority over the Philippine Islands. To that effect, Senator Tillman addressed the matter to President William McKinley:[7]

As though coming at the most opportune time possible, you might say just before the treaty reached the Senate, or about the time it was sent to us, there appeared in one of our magazines a poem by Rudyard Kipling, the greatest poet of England at this time. This poem, unique, and in some places too deep for me, is a prophecy. I do not imagine that in the history of human events any poet has ever felt inspired so clearly to portray our danger and our duty. It is called "The White Man’s Burden." With the permission of Senators I will read a stanza, and I beg Senators to listen to it, for it is well worth their attention. This man has lived in the Indies. In fact, he is a citizen of the world, and has been all over it, and knows whereof he speaks.[8]

He quotes, inter alia, stanzas 1, 4, and 5 of "The White Man's Burden", noting:

Those [Filipino] peoples are not suited to our institutions. They are not ready for liberty as we understand it. They do not want it. Why are we bent on forcing upon them a civilization not suited to them and which only means in their view degradation and a loss of self-respect, which is worse than the loss of life itself?[8]

Senator Tillman was unpersuasive, and the US Congress ratified the Treaty of Paris on 11 February 1899, formally ending the Spanish–American War. After paying a post-war indemnification of twenty million dollars to the Kingdom of Spain, on 11 April 1899, the US established geopolitical hegemony upon islands and peoples in two oceans and in two hemispheres: the Philippine Islands and Guam in the Pacific Ocean,[9][6] and Cuba and Puerto Rico in the Atlantic Oceans.[10]

Text Edit

 
Rudyard Kipling in Calcutta, India. (1892)
 
"The White (?) Man's Burden" shows the colonial exploitation of labour by various Western nations. (William Henry Walker, Life magazine, 16 March 1899)
 
"The White Man's Burden" in The Call newspaper (San Francisco, 5 February 1899)

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 hopes to nought.

Take up the White Man's burden—
    No tawdry 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 cry or whisper,
    By all ye leave or do,
The silent, sullen peoples
    Shall weigh your Gods 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![11]

Interpretation Edit

 
The American writer Mark Twain replied to the imperialism Kipling espoused in "The White Man's Burden" with the satirical essay "To the Person Sitting in Darkness" (1901), about the anti-imperialist Boxer Rebellion (1899) in China.

The imperialist interpretation of "The White Man's Burden" (1899) proposes that the white race is morally obliged to civilise the non-white peoples of planet Earth, and to encourage their progress (economic, social, and cultural) through colonialism:[12]

The implication, of course, was that the Empire existed not for the benefit — economic or strategic or otherwise — of Britain, itself, but in order that primitive peoples, incapable of self-government, could, with British guidance, eventually become civilized (and Christianized).[13]

Kipling positively represents imperialism as the moral burden of the white race, who are divinely destined to "civilise" the brutish, non-white Other who inhabits the barbarous parts of the world; to wit, the seventh and eighth lines of the first stanza represent the Filipinos as "new-caught, sullen peoples, half-devil and half-child."[14] Despite the chauvinistic nationalism that supported Western imperialism in the 19th century, public moral opposition to Kipling's racialist misrepresentation of the colonial exploitation of labour in "The White Man's Burden" produced the satirical essay "To the Person Sitting in Darkness" (1901), by Mark Twain, which catalogues the Western military atrocities of revenge committed against the Chinese people for their anti-colonial Boxer Rebellion (1899–1901) against abusive Western businessmen and Christian missionaries.[15]

Kipling politically proffered the poem to New York governor Theodore Roosevelt (r. 1899–1900) to help him persuade anti-imperialist Americans to accept the territorial annexation of the Philippine Islands to the United States.[16][17][18][19] In September 1898, Kipling's literary reputation in the U.S. allowed his promotion of American empire to Governor Roosevelt:

Now, go in and put all the weight of your influence into hanging on, permanently, to the whole Philippines. America has gone and stuck a pick-axe into the foundations of a rotten house, and she is morally bound to build the house over, again, from the foundations, or have it fall about her ears.[20]

As Victorian imperial poetry, "The White Man's Burden" thematically corresponded to Kipling's belief that the British Empire was the Englishman's "Divine Burden to reign God's Empire on Earth";[21][22] and celebrates British colonialism as a mission of civilisation that eventually would benefit the colonised natives.[23][24] Roosevelt sent the poem to U.S. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge for his opinion and they agreed that it made "good sense from the expansion standpoint" for the American empire.[25] Since the late nineteenth century, "The White Man's Burden" has served the arguments and counter-arguments of supporters and the opponents of imperialism and white supremacy.[25]

Responses Edit

 
To the white man's burden, the civilising mission of colonialism includes teaching colonized people about soap, water, and personal hygiene. (1890s advert)

In the early 20th century, in addition to "To the Person Sitting in Darkness" (1901), Mark Twain's factual satire of the civilising mission that is proposed, justified, and defended in "The White Man's Burden" (1899), contemporary opposition to Kipling's jingoism provoked poetic parodies that expressed anti-imperialist moral outrage, by critically addressing the particulars of white supremacist racism in colonial empires.[26] Said responses include "The Brown Man's Burden" (February 1899), by the British politician Henry Labouchère;[27] "The Black Man's Burden: A Response to Kipling" (April 1899), by the clergyman H. T. Johnson;[28] and the poem "Take Up the Black Man's Burden", by the educator J. Dallas Bowser.[29]

In the U.S., a Black Man's Burden Association demonstrated to Americans how the colonial mistreatment of Filipino brown people in their Philippine homeland was a cultural extension of the institutional racism of the Jim Crow laws for the legal mistreatment of black Americans in their U.S. homeland.[28] The popular response against Kipling's jingoism for an American Empire to annex the Philippine Islands as a colony impelled the establishment (15 June 1899) of the American Anti-Imperialist League in their political opposition to making colonial subjects of the Filipinos.[citation needed]

In The Poor Man’s Burden (1899), Dr. Howard S. Taylor addressed the negative psycho-social effects of the imperialist ethos upon the working-class people in an empire.[30][31] In the social perspective of "The Real White Man's Burden" (1902), the reformer Ernest Crosby addresses the moral degradation (coarsening of affect) consequent to the practice of imperialism;[32] and in "The Black Man's Burden" (1903), the British journalist E. D. Morel reported the Belgian imperial atrocities in the Congo Free State (1885–1908), which was an African personal property of King Leopold II of Belgium.[33]

In The Black Man's Burden: The White Man in Africa, from the Fifteenth Century to World War I (1920), E. D. Morel identifies, describes, and explains that the metropole-colony power relations are established through cultural hegemony, which determines the weight of the black man's burden and the weight of the white man's burden in building a colonial empire.[34][35] "The Black Man's Burden [A Reply to Rudyard Kipling]" (1920), by the social critic Hubert Harrison, described the moral degradation inflicted upon the colonised Black people and the colonist white people.[36]

In the decolonisation of the developing world, the phrase the white man's burden is synonymous with colonial domination, to illustrate the falsity of the good intentions of Western neo-colonialism towards the non-white peoples of the world.[26][37] In 1974, President Idi Amin of Uganda sat atop a throne while forcing four white British businessmen to carry him through the streets of Kampala; as the businessmen groaned under the weight of Amin, he joked that this was "the new white man's burden".[38]

See also Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b c Hitchens, Christopher. Blood, Class, and Empire: The Enduring Anglo–American Relationship (2004) pp. 63–64
  2. ^ Zwick, Jim (16 December 2005). Anti-Imperialism in the United States, 1898–1935. Archived from the original on 16 September 2002.
  3. ^ Miller, Stuart Creighton (1982). Benevolent Assimilation: The American Conquest of the Philippines, 1899–1903. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-03081-9. p. 5: ". . . imperialist editors came out in favor of retaining the entire archipelago (using) higher-sounding justifications related to the 'white man's burden'".
  4. ^ Examples of justification for imperialism based on Kipling's poem include the following (originally published 1899–1902):
    • Opinion archive, International Herald Tribune (4 February 1999). "In Our Pages: 100, 75 and 50 Years Ago; 1899: Kipling's Plea". International Herald Tribune: 6.: "An extraordinary sensation has been created by Mr. Rudyard Kipling's new poem, The White Man's Burden, just published in a New York magazine. It is regarded as the strongest argument yet published in favor of expansion."
    • Dixon, Thomas (1902). The Leopard's Spots: A Romance of the White Man's Burden—1865–1900. Facsimile of a novel by Thomas Dixon, Jr. praising the Ku Klux Klan, via Google Books. Also available at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (full text).
  5. ^ Pimentel, Benjamin (26 October 2003). The Philippines' 'Liberator' Was Really a Colonizer: Bush's Revisionist History. p. D3. from the original on 29 June 2011. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help): characterising the poem as a "call to imperial conquest".
  6. ^ a b ""The White Man's Burden" (1899): Notes by Mary Hamer". 2019. Retrieved 3 February 2019.
  7. ^ Herman, Shadowing the White Man's Burden (2010), pp. 41–42.
  8. ^ a b Tillman, Benjamin R. "Address to the U.S. Senate, 7 February 1899" (PDF). National Humanities Center. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  9. ^ Charles Henry Butler (1902). The Treaty Making Power of the United States. The Banks Law Publishing Company. p. 441. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
  10. ^ "Treaty of Peace Between the United States and Spain; December 10, 1898". Yale. 2009. Retrieved 1 May 2009.
  11. ^ Kipling, Rudyard (1940). Rudyard Kipling's Verse (Definitive ed.). Garden City, NY: Doubleday. pp. 321–323. OCLC 225762741.
  12. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature 6th Edition (2006) p. 808.
  13. ^ David Cody, "The growth of the British Empire", VictorianWeb, (Paragraph 4)
  14. ^ Benét's Reader's Encyclopedia, Fourth Edition (1996) pp. 1,111–1.112
  15. ^ John V. Denson (1999). The Costs of War: America's Pyrrhic Victories. Transaction Publishers. pp. [1]. ISBN 978-0-7658-0487-7(note ff. 28 & 33).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  16. ^ Judd, Denis (June 1997). "Diamonds Are Forever: Kipling's Imperialism; poems of Rudyard Kipling". History Today. 47 (6): 37.: "Theodore Roosevelt . . . thought the verses 'rather poor poetry, but good sense, from the expansionist stand-point'. Henry Cabot Lodge told Roosevelt, in turn: 'I like it. I think it is better poetry than you say.' "
  17. ^ Greenblatt, Stephen. Norton Anthology of English Literature, New York 2006 ISBN 0-393-92532-3.
  18. ^ Wolpert, Stanley (2006)
  19. ^ Brantlinger, Patrick (2007). "Kipling's 'The White Man's Burden' and its Afterlives", English Literature in Transition 1880–1920, 50.2, pp. 172–191.
  20. ^ Kipling, Rudyard (1990) The Letters of Rudyard Kipling, Thomas Pinney, Editor. London, Macmillan, Vol II, p. 350.
  21. ^ Greenblatt, Stephen, Norton Anthology of English Literature, New York, 2006 ISBN 0-393-92532-3, p. 000.
  22. ^ What Will Happen In Afghanistan?". United Press International. 26 September 2001.
  23. ^ Langer, William (1935). A Critique of Imperialism. New York: Council on Foreign Relations, Inc. p. 6.
  24. ^ Demkin, Stephen (1996). Manifest destiny–Lecture notes. USA: Delaware County Community College.
  25. ^ a b Brantlinger, Patrick (30 January 2007). "Kipling's "The White Man's Burden" and Its Afterlives". English Literature in Transition, 1880–1920. 50 (2): 172–191. doi:10.1353/elt.2007.0017. ISSN 1559-2715. S2CID 162945098.
  26. ^ a b Benét's Reader's Encyclopedia, Fourth Edition (1996), p. 560.
  27. ^ Labouchère, Henry (1899). "The Brown Man's Burden", parodies Kipling's white-burden.
  28. ^ a b "'The Black Man's Burden': A Response to Kipling". History Matters. American Social History Productions. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  29. ^ Brantlinger, Patrick. Taming Cannibals: Race and the Victorians, Cornell University Press, 2011. p. 215.
  30. ^ Taylor, Howard S. ""The Poor Man's Burden" (Excerpt)". HERB: Resources for Teachers. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
  31. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (2008). "Chapter 5: The White Man's Burden". Standing at Armageddon: A Grassroots History of the Progressive Era. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-33192-9.
  32. ^ Crosby, Ernest (1902). The Real White Man's Burden. Funk and Wagnalls Company. pp. 32–35. Published online by History Matters, American Social History Project, CUNY and George Mason University.
  33. ^ "The Black Man's Burden". Fordham.edu. Retrieved 16 December 2017.
  34. ^ "E. D. Morel, The Black Man's Burden (1920)". wadsworth.com. Retrieved 16 December 2017.
  35. ^ Morel, Edmund (1903). The Black Man's Burden. Fordham University.
  36. ^ "The Black Man's Burden [A Reply to Rudyard Kipling]". Expo98.msu.edu. Retrieved 16 December 2017.
  37. ^ Plamen Makariev. Eurocentrism, Encyclopedia of the Developing World (2006) Thomas M. Leonard, Ed. ISBN 0-415-97662-6, p. 636: "On one hand, this is the Western 'well-intended' aspiration to dominate 'the developing world.' The formula 'the white man's burden', from Rudyard Kipling's eponymous poem, is emblematic in this respect."; Chisholm, Michael. Modern World Development: A Geographical Perspective. Rowman & Littlefield, 1982, ISBN 0-389-20320-3, p.12: "This Eurocentric view of the world assumed that, but for the 'improvements' wrought by Europeans in Latin America, in Africa and in Asia, the manifest poverty of their peoples would be even worse."; and Rieder, John. Colonialism and the Emergence of Science Fiction 2008. Wesleyan University Press, Middleton, Conn., p. 30: "The proto-narrative of progress operates equally in the ideology of the 'white man's burden' — the belief that non-whites are child-like innocents in need of white men's protection — and the assumptions that undergird Victorian anthropology. From the most legitimate scientific endeavour to the most debased and transparent prejudices runs the common assumption that the relation of the colonizing societies to the colonized ones is that of the developed, modern present to its own undeveloped, primitive past."
  38. ^ Mazrui 2004, p. 253.

General references Edit

  • A Companion to Victorian Poetry, Alison Chapman; Blackwell, Oxford, 2002.
  • Chisholm, Michael (1982). Modern World Development: A Geographical Perspective. Rowman & Littlefield, 1982, ISBN 0-389-20320-3.
  • Cody, David. "The Growth of the British Empire". The Victorian Web, University Scholars Program, National University of Singapore, 1988.
  • Crosby, Ernest (1902). The Real White Man's Burden. Funk and Wagnalls Company, 32–35.
  • Dixon, Thomas (1902). The Leopard's Spots: A Romance of the White Man's Burden—1865–1900.
  • Encyclopedia of India. Ed. Stanley Wolpert. Vol. 3. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2006, pp. 35–36. 4 vols.
  • "Eurocentrism". In Encyclopedia of the Developing World. Ed. Thomas M. Leonard, Taylor & Francis, 2006, ISBN 0-415-97662-6.
  • Greenblatt, Stephen (ed.). Norton Anthology of English Literature, New York, 2006. ISBN 0-393-92532-3.
  • Kipling. Fordham University. Full text of the poem.
  • Labouchère, Henry (1899). .
  • Mama, Amina (1995). Beyond the Masks: Race, Gender, and Subjectivity. Routledge, 1995, ISBN 0-415-03544-9.
  • Mazrui, Ali AlʼAmin (2004). Power, politics, and the African condition. Trenton: Africa World Press. ISBN 9781592211616.
  • Miller, Stuart Creighton (1982). Benevolent Assimilation: The American Conquest of the Philippines, 1899–1903. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-03081-9.
  • Murphy, Gretchen (2010). Shadowing the White Man's Burden: U.S. Imperialism and the Problem of the Color Line. NYU Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-9619-1
  • Pimentel, Benjamin (26 October 2003). "The Philippines; 'Liberator' Was Really a Colonizer; Bush's Revisionist History". San Francisco Chronicle: D3.
  • Sailer, Steve (2001). "What Will Happen in Afghanistan?". United Press International, 26 September 2001.
  • The Shining. Jack Nicholson's character Jack uses the phrase to refer to whiskey.
  • The Text of the poem
  •   The White Man's Burden public domain audiobook at LibriVox

white, burden, book, william, easterly, william, easterly, white, burden, redirects, here, 1995, film, white, burden, film, 1899, rudyard, kipling, poem, about, philippine, american, 1899, 1902, that, exhorts, united, states, assume, colonial, control, filipin. For the book by William Easterly see William Easterly White Man s Burden redirects here For the 1995 film see White Man s Burden film The White Man s Burden 1899 by Rudyard Kipling is a poem about the Philippine American War 1899 1902 that exhorts the United States to assume colonial control of the Filipino people and their country 1 Originally written to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria 22 June 1897 the jingoistic poem was replaced with the sombre Recessional 1897 also a Kipling poem about empire The editorial cartoon The White Man s Burden Apologies to Rudyard Kipling shows John Bull Britain and Uncle Sam U S delivering the world s people of colour to civilisation Victor Gillam Judge magazine 1 April 1899 The people in the basket carried by Uncle Sam are labelled Cuba Hawaii Samoa Porto Rico and the Philippines while the people in the basket carried by John Bull are labelled Zulu China India Soudan and Egypt In The White Man s Burden Kipling encouraged the American annexation and colonisation of the Philippine Islands a Pacific Ocean archipelago conquered in the three month Spanish American War 1898 1 As an imperialist poet Kipling exhorts the American reader and listener to take up the enterprise of empire yet warns about the personal costs faced endured and paid in building an empire 1 nonetheless American imperialists understood the phrase the white man s burden to justify imperial conquest as a civilising mission that is ideologically related to the continental expansion philosophy of manifest destiny of the early 19th century 2 3 4 5 Contents 1 History 2 Text 3 Interpretation 4 Responses 5 See also 6 Citations 7 General referencesHistory Edit nbsp The White Man s Burden civilising the unwilling savage Detroit Journal 1898 nbsp The White Man s Burden published in McClure s Magazine February 1899 nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Senator Tillman s senate speech on 7 February 1899 The White Man s Burden was first published in The Times London on 4 February 1899 and in The New York Sun on 5 February 1899 6 On 7 February 1899 during senatorial debate to decide if the US should retain control of the Philippine Islands and the ten million Filipinos conquered from the Spanish Empire Senator Benjamin Tillman read aloud the first the fourth and the fifth stanzas of Kipling s seven stanza poem as arguments against ratification of the Treaty of Paris and that the US should formally renounce claim of authority over the Philippine Islands To that effect Senator Tillman addressed the matter to President William McKinley 7 As though coming at the most opportune time possible you might say just before the treaty reached the Senate or about the time it was sent to us there appeared in one of our magazines a poem by Rudyard Kipling the greatest poet of England at this time This poem unique and in some places too deep for me is a prophecy I do not imagine that in the history of human events any poet has ever felt inspired so clearly to portray our danger and our duty It is called The White Man s Burden With the permission of Senators I will read a stanza and I beg Senators to listen to it for it is well worth their attention This man has lived in the Indies In fact he is a citizen of the world and has been all over it and knows whereof he speaks 8 He quotes inter alia stanzas 1 4 and 5 of The White Man s Burden noting Those Filipino peoples are not suited to our institutions They are not ready for liberty as we understand it They do not want it Why are we bent on forcing upon them a civilization not suited to them and which only means in their view degradation and a loss of self respect which is worse than the loss of life itself 8 Senator Tillman was unpersuasive and the US Congress ratified the Treaty of Paris on 11 February 1899 formally ending the Spanish American War After paying a post war indemnification of twenty million dollars to the Kingdom of Spain on 11 April 1899 the US established geopolitical hegemony upon islands and peoples in two oceans and in two hemispheres the Philippine Islands and Guam in the Pacific Ocean 9 6 and Cuba and Puerto Rico in the Atlantic Oceans 10 Text Edit nbsp Rudyard Kipling in Calcutta India 1892 nbsp The White Man s Burden shows the colonial exploitation of labour by various Western nations William Henry Walker Life magazine 16 March 1899 nbsp The White Man s Burden in The Call newspaper San Francisco 5 February 1899 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 hopes to nought Take up the White Man s burden No tawdry 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 cry or whisper By all ye leave or do The silent sullen peoples Shall weigh your Gods 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 11 Interpretation Edit nbsp The American writer Mark Twain replied to the imperialism Kipling espoused in The White Man s Burden with the satirical essay To the Person Sitting in Darkness 1901 about the anti imperialist Boxer Rebellion 1899 in China The imperialist interpretation of The White Man s Burden 1899 proposes that the white race is morally obliged to civilise the non white peoples of planet Earth and to encourage their progress economic social and cultural through colonialism 12 The implication of course was that the Empire existed not for the benefit economic or strategic or otherwise of Britain itself but in order that primitive peoples incapable of self government could with British guidance eventually become civilized and Christianized 13 Kipling positively represents imperialism as the moral burden of the white race who are divinely destined to civilise the brutish non white Other who inhabits the barbarous parts of the world to wit the seventh and eighth lines of the first stanza represent the Filipinos as new caught sullen peoples half devil and half child 14 Despite the chauvinistic nationalism that supported Western imperialism in the 19th century public moral opposition to Kipling s racialist misrepresentation of the colonial exploitation of labour in The White Man s Burden produced the satirical essay To the Person Sitting in Darkness 1901 by Mark Twain which catalogues the Western military atrocities of revenge committed against the Chinese people for their anti colonial Boxer Rebellion 1899 1901 against abusive Western businessmen and Christian missionaries 15 Kipling politically proffered the poem to New York governor Theodore Roosevelt r 1899 1900 to help him persuade anti imperialist Americans to accept the territorial annexation of the Philippine Islands to the United States 16 17 18 19 In September 1898 Kipling s literary reputation in the U S allowed his promotion of American empire to Governor Roosevelt Now go in and put all the weight of your influence into hanging on permanently to the whole Philippines America has gone and stuck a pick axe into the foundations of a rotten house and she is morally bound to build the house over again from the foundations or have it fall about her ears 20 As Victorian imperial poetry The White Man s Burden thematically corresponded to Kipling s belief that the British Empire was the Englishman s Divine Burden to reign God s Empire on Earth 21 22 and celebrates British colonialism as a mission of civilisation that eventually would benefit the colonised natives 23 24 Roosevelt sent the poem to U S Senator Henry Cabot Lodge for his opinion and they agreed that it made good sense from the expansion standpoint for the American empire 25 Since the late nineteenth century The White Man s Burden has served the arguments and counter arguments of supporters and the opponents of imperialism and white supremacy 25 Responses Edit nbsp To the white man s burden the civilising mission of colonialism includes teaching colonized people about soap water and personal hygiene 1890s advert In the early 20th century in addition to To the Person Sitting in Darkness 1901 Mark Twain s factual satire of the civilising mission that is proposed justified and defended in The White Man s Burden 1899 contemporary opposition to Kipling s jingoism provoked poetic parodies that expressed anti imperialist moral outrage by critically addressing the particulars of white supremacist racism in colonial empires 26 Said responses include The Brown Man s Burden February 1899 by the British politician Henry Labouchere 27 The Black Man s Burden A Response to Kipling April 1899 by the clergyman H T Johnson 28 and the poem Take Up the Black Man s Burden by the educator J Dallas Bowser 29 In the U S a Black Man s Burden Association demonstrated to Americans how the colonial mistreatment of Filipino brown people in their Philippine homeland was a cultural extension of the institutional racism of the Jim Crow laws for the legal mistreatment of black Americans in their U S homeland 28 The popular response against Kipling s jingoism for an American Empire to annex the Philippine Islands as a colony impelled the establishment 15 June 1899 of the American Anti Imperialist League in their political opposition to making colonial subjects of the Filipinos citation needed In The Poor Man s Burden 1899 Dr Howard S Taylor addressed the negative psycho social effects of the imperialist ethos upon the working class people in an empire 30 31 In the social perspective of The Real White Man s Burden 1902 the reformer Ernest Crosby addresses the moral degradation coarsening of affect consequent to the practice of imperialism 32 and in The Black Man s Burden 1903 the British journalist E D Morel reported the Belgian imperial atrocities in the Congo Free State 1885 1908 which was an African personal property of King Leopold II of Belgium 33 In The Black Man s Burden The White Man in Africa from the Fifteenth Century to World War I 1920 E D Morel identifies describes and explains that the metropole colony power relations are established through cultural hegemony which determines the weight of the black man s burden and the weight of the white man s burden in building a colonial empire 34 35 The Black Man s Burden A Reply to Rudyard Kipling 1920 by the social critic Hubert Harrison described the moral degradation inflicted upon the colonised Black people and the colonist white people 36 In the decolonisation of the developing world the phrase the white man s burden is synonymous with colonial domination to illustrate the falsity of the good intentions of Western neo colonialism towards the non white peoples of the world 26 37 In 1974 President Idi Amin of Uganda sat atop a throne while forcing four white British businessmen to carry him through the streets of Kampala as the businessmen groaned under the weight of Amin he joked that this was the new white man s burden 38 See also EditDevelopment theory Christian mission Civilizing mission Economic growth Faccetta Nera Orientalism Rudyard Kipling bibliography The Gods of the Copybook Headings 1919 by Rudyard Kipling The Tears of the White Man by Pascal Bruckner The Tyranny of Guilt by Pascal Bruckner White savior Valladolid debate Yellow PerilCitations Edit a b c Hitchens Christopher Blood Class and Empire The Enduring Anglo American Relationship 2004 pp 63 64 Zwick Jim 16 December 2005 Anti Imperialism in the United States 1898 1935 Archived from the original on 16 September 2002 Miller Stuart Creighton 1982 Benevolent Assimilation The American Conquest of the Philippines 1899 1903 Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 03081 9 p 5 imperialist editors came out in favor of retaining the entire archipelago using higher sounding justifications related to the white man s burden Examples of justification for imperialism based on Kipling s poem include the following originally published 1899 1902 Opinion archive International Herald Tribune 4 February 1999 In Our Pages 100 75 and 50 Years Ago 1899 Kipling s Plea International Herald Tribune 6 An extraordinary sensation has been created by Mr Rudyard Kipling s new poem The White Man s Burden just published in a New York magazine It is regarded as the strongest argument yet published in favor of expansion Dixon Thomas 1902 The Leopard s Spots A Romance of the White Man s Burden 1865 1900 Facsimile of a novel by Thomas Dixon Jr praising the Ku Klux Klan via Google Books Also available at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill full text Pimentel Benjamin 26 October 2003 The Philippines Liberator Was Really a Colonizer Bush s Revisionist History p D3 Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help characterising the poem as a call to imperial conquest a b The White Man s Burden 1899 Notes by Mary Hamer 2019 Retrieved 3 February 2019 Herman Shadowing the White Man s Burden 2010 pp 41 42 a b Tillman Benjamin R Address to the U S Senate 7 February 1899 PDF National Humanities Center Retrieved 20 January 2020 Charles Henry Butler 1902 The Treaty Making Power of the United States The Banks Law Publishing Company p 441 Retrieved 9 April 2011 Treaty of Peace Between the United States and Spain December 10 1898 Yale 2009 Retrieved 1 May 2009 Kipling Rudyard 1940 Rudyard Kipling s Verse Definitive ed Garden City NY Doubleday pp 321 323 OCLC 225762741 The Oxford Companion to English Literature 6th Edition 2006 p 808 David Cody The growth of the British Empire VictorianWeb Paragraph 4 Benet s Reader s Encyclopedia Fourth Edition 1996 pp 1 111 1 112 John V Denson 1999 The Costs of War America s Pyrrhic Victories Transaction Publishers pp 1 ISBN 978 0 7658 0487 7 note ff 28 amp 33 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Judd Denis June 1997 Diamonds Are Forever Kipling s Imperialism poems of Rudyard Kipling History Today 47 6 37 Theodore Roosevelt thought the verses rather poor poetry but good sense from the expansionist stand point Henry Cabot Lodge told Roosevelt in turn I like it I think it is better poetry than you say Greenblatt Stephen Norton Anthology of English Literature New York 2006 ISBN 0 393 92532 3 Wolpert Stanley 2006 Brantlinger Patrick 2007 Kipling s The White Man s Burden and its Afterlives English Literature in Transition 1880 1920 50 2 pp 172 191 Kipling Rudyard 1990 The Letters of Rudyard Kipling Thomas Pinney Editor London Macmillan Vol II p 350 Greenblatt Stephen Norton Anthology of English Literature New York 2006 ISBN 0 393 92532 3 p 000 What Will Happen In Afghanistan United Press International 26 September 2001 Langer William 1935 A Critique of Imperialism New York Council on Foreign Relations Inc p 6 Demkin Stephen 1996 Manifest destiny Lecture notes USA Delaware County Community College a b Brantlinger Patrick 30 January 2007 Kipling s The White Man s Burden and Its Afterlives English Literature in Transition 1880 1920 50 2 172 191 doi 10 1353 elt 2007 0017 ISSN 1559 2715 S2CID 162945098 a b Benet s Reader s Encyclopedia Fourth Edition 1996 p 560 Labouchere Henry 1899 The Brown Man s Burden parodies Kipling s white burden a b The Black Man s Burden A Response to Kipling History Matters American Social History Productions Retrieved 12 April 2016 Brantlinger Patrick Taming Cannibals Race and the Victorians Cornell University Press 2011 p 215 Taylor Howard S The Poor Man s Burden Excerpt HERB Resources for Teachers Retrieved 19 December 2017 Painter Nell Irvin 2008 Chapter 5 The White Man s Burden Standing at Armageddon A Grassroots History of the Progressive Era New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 33192 9 Crosby Ernest 1902 The Real White Man s Burden Funk and Wagnalls Company pp 32 35 Published online by History Matters American Social History Project CUNY and George Mason University The Black Man s Burden Fordham edu Retrieved 16 December 2017 E D Morel The Black Man s Burden 1920 wadsworth com Retrieved 16 December 2017 Morel Edmund 1903 The Black Man s Burden Fordham University The Black Man s Burden A Reply to Rudyard Kipling Expo98 msu edu Retrieved 16 December 2017 Plamen Makariev Eurocentrism Encyclopedia of the Developing World 2006 Thomas M Leonard Ed ISBN 0 415 97662 6 p 636 On one hand this is the Western well intended aspiration to dominate the developing world The formula the white man s burden from Rudyard Kipling s eponymous poem is emblematic in this respect Chisholm Michael Modern World Development A Geographical Perspective Rowman amp Littlefield 1982 ISBN 0 389 20320 3 p 12 This Eurocentric view of the world assumed that but for the improvements wrought by Europeans in Latin America in Africa and in Asia the manifest poverty of their peoples would be even worse and Rieder John Colonialism and the Emergence of Science Fiction 2008 Wesleyan University Press Middleton Conn p 30 The proto narrative of progress operates equally in the ideology of the white man s burden the belief that non whites are child like innocents in need of white men s protection and the assumptions that undergird Victorian anthropology From the most legitimate scientific endeavour to the most debased and transparent prejudices runs the common assumption that the relation of the colonizing societies to the colonized ones is that of the developed modern present to its own undeveloped primitive past Mazrui 2004 p 253 General references EditA Companion to Victorian Poetry Alison Chapman Blackwell Oxford 2002 Chisholm Michael 1982 Modern World Development A Geographical Perspective Rowman amp Littlefield 1982 ISBN 0 389 20320 3 Cody David The Growth of the British Empire The Victorian Web University Scholars Program National University of Singapore 1988 Crosby Ernest 1902 The Real White Man s Burden Funk and Wagnalls Company 32 35 Dixon Thomas 1902 The Leopard s Spots A Romance of the White Man s Burden 1865 1900 Encyclopedia of India Ed Stanley Wolpert Vol 3 Detroit Charles Scribner s Sons 2006 pp 35 36 4 vols Eurocentrism In Encyclopedia of the Developing World Ed Thomas M Leonard Taylor amp Francis 2006 ISBN 0 415 97662 6 Greenblatt Stephen ed Norton Anthology of English Literature New York 2006 ISBN 0 393 92532 3 Kipling Fordham University Full text of the poem Labouchere Henry 1899 The Brown Man s Burden Mama Amina 1995 Beyond the Masks Race Gender and Subjectivity Routledge 1995 ISBN 0 415 03544 9 Mazrui Ali AlʼAmin 2004 Power politics and the African condition Trenton Africa World Press ISBN 9781592211616 Miller Stuart Creighton 1982 Benevolent Assimilation The American Conquest of the Philippines 1899 1903 Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 03081 9 Murphy Gretchen 2010 Shadowing the White Man s Burden U S Imperialism and the Problem of the Color Line NYU Press ISBN 978 0 8147 9619 1 Pimentel Benjamin 26 October 2003 The Philippines Liberator Was Really a Colonizer Bush s Revisionist History San Francisco Chronicle D3 Sailer Steve 2001 What Will Happen in Afghanistan United Press International 26 September 2001 The Shining Jack Nicholson s character Jack uses the phrase to refer to whiskey The Text of the poem nbsp The White Man s Burden public domain audiobook at LibriVox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The White Man 27s Burden amp oldid 1180541368, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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