The Heritage by Rudyard Kipling

September 22, 2011 Blog, Culture, Europe, Poetry Print Page

 

The following is a moving poem written by the great English poet Rudyard Kipling on one of the two major topics which this website is dedicated to – heritage.

 

The Heritage

Our Fathers in a wondrous age,
Ere yet the Earth was small,
Ensured to us a heritage,
And doubted not at all
That we, the children of their heart,
Which then did beat so high,
In later time should play like part
For our posterity.

A thousand years they steadfast built,
To ‘vantage us and ours,
The Walls that were a world’s despair,
The sea-constraining Towers:
Yet in their midmost pride they knew,
And unto Kings made known,
Not all from these their strength they drew,
Their faith from brass or stone.

Youth’s passion, manhood’s fierce intent,
With age’s judgment wise,
They spent, and counted not they spent,
At daily sacrifice.
Not lambs alone nor purchased doves
Or tithe of trader’s gold –
Their lives most dear, their dearer loves,
They offered up of old.

Refraining e’en from lawful things,
They bowed the neck to bear
The unadorned yoke that brings
Stark toil and sternest care.
Wherefore through them is Freedom sure;
Wherefore through them we stand,
From all but sloth and pride secure,
In a delightsome land.

Then, fretful, murmur not they gave
So great a charge to keep,
Nor dream that awestruck Time shall save
Their labour while we sleep.
Dear-bought and clear, a thousand year,
Our fathers’ title runs.
Make we likewise their sacrifice,
Defrauding not our sons.

 

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About Nathanael Strickland

Nathanael Strickland is the owner and chief editor of FaithandHeritage.com. He was born in Dallas, TX, grew up in upstate SC, and now resides in SE TX. He received both his BS in Political Science with a minor in Economics and his MBA from Clemson University and now works in project management, SEO, and web design. He has ancestors who fought with the patriots in the American Revolution, with the Texans at the Alamo, and with the Confederacy in the War for Southern Independence. You can reach him by email at editor [at] faithandheritage.com.

  • John

    A very beautiful and moving poem. It instructs us as Christian men of West as to what our duty must be. In the words of Scripture: A righteous man leaves an inheritance for his children’s children.

  • Anonymous

    Every Kipling poem is a gem.  I like each I read more than the last.  I’ve been having trouble finding his collected works in local bookstores; I’m going to check out Amazon so as to have them at my fingertips. 

    That last line “Defrauding not our sons” – is so dreadfully sad and poignant, given what’s happened to Christian civilization.  How “funny” it reminds one of the Founders’ line “for us and our posterity” – of course, that’s merely happenstance; everyone knows we were never a Christian nation.

  • Anonymous

    I love Kipling’s poetry; I’ve been having trouble trying to find his collected works at local bookstores.  Of course, he fell out of fashion long ago.

    John, your comment echoes my own thoughts, although for some reason I’ve been having trouble posting.  What I had written was that the last, poignant line (“Defrauding not our sons”) brought to mind the Founders’ “For us and our posterity.”  Preferring one’s own is now popularly interpreted as hating the other, or being a “nazi.”  We, as a nation, have been defrauding “our sons” for generations, may God forgive us.

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