Part II of a series exploring Rudyard Kipling's The White Man's Burden
In the first installment of this series, we examined the opening stanza of Rudyard Kipling's The White Man's Burden. There, Kipling introduced his central argument: empire is not a privilege but a burden. Colonial rule is presented not as conquest but as sacrifice. The imperial servant leaves home, endures exile, and labors on behalf of newly conquered peoples.
Whether one accepts that vision or rejects it, the opening stanza lays out the moral foundation of Kipling's worldview.
The second stanza asks a different question.
If empire is indeed a burden, how should it be carried?
Kipling's answer is surprisingly revealing. He does not advocate brutality, triumphalism, or overt displays of superiority. Instead, he outlines a code of conduct for the imperial administrator: patience, restraint, humility, honesty, and service.
Yet beneath these virtues lies a deeper assumption that remains unquestioned.
The hierarchy itself.
The second stanza reads:
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.
At first glance, this sounds almost noble.
Upon closer examination, it reveals one of the most sophisticated moral defenses of empire ever written.
Empire Begins with Self-Control
The stanza opens by repeating the poem's famous refrain:
Take up the White Man's burden—
The repetition is important.
Kipling is not describing a temporary task. He is describing a continuing obligation, almost a vocation. Each stanza elaborates a different aspect of what that burden entails.
In the first stanza, the emphasis was sacrifice.
In the second, the emphasis becomes discipline.
The imperial servant must not merely govern others.
He must govern himself.
This distinction was central to the Victorian ideal of leadership. The truly civilized man was not one who exercised power recklessly but one who mastered his own impulses.
The ruler's first responsibility was self-control.
Patience as an Imperial Virtue
The first specific instruction is striking:
In patience to abide
Kipling is asking the imperial administrator to endure frustration without complaint.
The assumption behind the line is that governing distant peoples is a slow and difficult process. Progress will not occur immediately. Resistance will arise. Misunderstandings will be common.
The administrator must therefore cultivate patience.
Notice, however, where the patience is directed.
The colonized are not being asked to be patient.
The ruler is.
Throughout the poem, the focus remains on the moral character of the imperial servant.
The colonized appear primarily as recipients of action rather than participants in it.
This pattern will recur repeatedly.
The Threat Behind the Smile
The next line may be the most revealing in the stanza:
To veil the threat of terror
Modern readers are often surprised by this admission.
Kipling does not deny that imperial rule ultimately depends upon force.
He acknowledges it.
The key word is "veil."
The threat exists.
It simply should not be displayed openly.
This is a remarkable moment of honesty.
Empires require armies, police forces, courts, prisons, and mechanisms of coercion. Kipling understood this perfectly well. The British Empire was not sustained by goodwill alone.
Yet he believed that force should remain in the background.
The ideal ruler governs through persuasion and administration rather than intimidation.
The threat of power is present, but it remains veiled.
In modern terms, we might call this the difference between authority and naked coercion.
The distinction remains politically relevant today.
Humility in the Midst of Power
The next instruction follows naturally:
And check the show of pride
If force must be concealed, arrogance must also be restrained.
The imperial servant should not boast about power.
He should not celebrate domination.
He should not behave as a conqueror.
Instead, he should approach his task with modesty.
This reflects a broader Victorian ideal of public service. Kipling admired competent administrators who viewed themselves as caretakers rather than celebrities.
The ideal imperial official was not a swaggering general.
He was a disciplined civil servant.
Yet a paradox emerges.
The empire remains an empire.
Millions of people remain under foreign rule.
The exercise of power continues.
Only its display is discouraged.
The line therefore reveals an important feature of imperial ideology: domination becomes more acceptable when accompanied by humility.
Power is not removed.
It is softened.
The Teacher and the Student
The stanza then shifts toward communication:
By open speech and simple,
An hundred times made plain
Kipling imagines the ideal administrator as a teacher.
Policies should be explained clearly.
Instructions should be repeated patiently.
Nothing should be hidden.
The ruler should communicate openly and honestly.
On one level, this seems admirable.
On another level, it reveals the educational metaphor running throughout the poem.
The colonized are implicitly cast in the role of students.
They require explanation.
They require instruction.
They require guidance.
The relationship is not one of political equals debating their future.
It is one of teacher and pupil.
Parent and child.
Guardian and dependent.
This assumption remains largely invisible within the poem because Kipling takes it for granted.
Modern readers are more likely to notice it immediately.
The Heart of the Argument
The final two lines contain the moral core of the stanza:
To seek another's profit,
And work another's gain.
This is perhaps the most important claim in the entire poem.
According to Kipling, empire exists not for the benefit of the imperial power but for the benefit of those being governed.
The administrator works.
Others benefit.
The administrator sacrifices.
Others prosper.
The administrator bears the burden.
Others receive the reward.
This is the central ethical claim that transforms empire from domination into service.
Without it, the poem collapses.
If empire benefits the ruler more than the ruled, then the entire moral structure of the argument begins to unravel.
This is precisely where many of Kipling's critics directed their attention.
Anti-colonial thinkers asked uncomfortable questions.
If empire exists for another's gain, why are colonies economically dependent?
If empire seeks another's profit, why are resources extracted?
If empire is fundamentally altruistic, why are the governed denied the right to determine their own future?
These questions would become increasingly difficult for imperial powers to answer during the twentieth century.
The Ideal Empire
Taken as a whole, the second stanza describes what Kipling believed empire ought to be.
Not arrogant.
Not cruel.
Not self-interested.
But patient.
Restrained.
Honest.
Self-sacrificing.
Dedicated to the welfare of others.
This is empire imagined as guardianship.
The model is not conqueror and conquered.
It is parent and child.
Teacher and student.
Caretaker and dependent.
And this is where the poem becomes simultaneously admirable and troubling.
The virtues Kipling praises—patience, humility, honesty, service—are genuine virtues.
Many readers can appreciate them.
The problem lies not in the virtues themselves.
The problem lies in the hierarchy that gives those virtues their purpose.
The parent remains the parent.
The child remains the child.
The ruler remains the ruler.
The ruled remain the ruled.
At no point does the poem ask whether the relationship itself should continue.
The Question Kipling Never Asks
The second stanza is perhaps the most sophisticated section of The White Man's Burden because it moves beyond simple assertions of superiority.
Kipling does not merely say that some peoples should govern others.
He asks those governors to exercise restraint, humility, and selflessness.
Yet one question remains absent.
If the people being governed are capable of becoming prosperous, educated, and politically mature, why should they not ultimately govern themselves?
Kipling never fully confronts that possibility.
The burden remains with the ruler.
The agency remains with the ruler.
The responsibility remains with the ruler.
The future remains with the ruler.
For much of the nineteenth century, that answer seemed self-evident to many imperial thinkers.
By the middle of the twentieth century, it would become increasingly difficult to sustain.
The great decolonization movements that followed would challenge not merely the methods of empire, but the very assumption that one people could ever legitimately carry another people's burden.
And it is that unresolved tension that continues to make this stanza worth reading today.
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