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  1. While he originally wrote the poem to celebrate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee in 1897, Kipling revised it in 1899 to exhort the American people to conquer and rule the Philippines. Conquest in the poem is not portrayed as a way for the white race to gain individual or national wealth or power.

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  2. Jun 1, 2002 · Kipling's contempt for the aesthetes and socialists who had cared for him in extremity was sometimes expressed in an exaggerated distaste for the William Morris types and the...

  3. Jul 7, 2019 · Self-Reliance” is recast in “If,” the poem Kipling was to say escaped its bindings “and for a while ran about the world.” It too had an American accent, originally having been ...

  4. Expert Answers. Kipling wrote the poem for a children's magazine. It was written as a complementary piece to a description of George Washington. Placing it afterwards, Kipling was intending to...

  5. Kipling began working on the book by telling the first three chapters as bedtime stories to his daughter Josephine. These had to be told "just so" (exactly in the words she was used to) or she would complain.

    • Rudyard Kipling
    • 1902
  6. Since his death in 1936, his literary reputation has diminished due to his disturbing and old-fashioned social and political views, chief among them being his support for the imperial “civilizing mission,” a set of ideas the British Empire used to justify colonization. Next section Historical and Literary Context. PLUS.

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  8. Why did Rudyard Kipling write ‘If—’? In his autobiography, “Something of Myself” Kipling said he was greatly influenced by the character of Leander Starr Jameson. This character influenced him to write the poem, ‘If—.’ Besides, he wrote this poem as a piece of advice to his dear son.

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