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If
If you can keep
your head when all
about you
Are losing theirs
and blaming it on
you;
If you can trust
yourself when all
men doubt you,
But make allowance
for their doubting
too:
If you can wait and
not be tired by
waiting,
Or, being lied
about, don't deal in
lies,
Or being hated don't
give way to hating,
And yet don't look
too good, nor talk
too wise;
If you can dream -
and not make dreams
your master;
If you can think -
and not make
thoughts your aim,
If you can meet with
Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two
impostors just the
same:.
If you can bear to
hear the truth
you've spoken
Twisted by knaves to
make a trap for
fools,
Or watch the things
you gave your life
to, broken,
And stoop and
build'em up with
worn-out tools;
If you can make one
heap of all your
winnings
And risk it on one
turn of
pitch-and-toss,
And lose, and start
again at your
beginnings,
And never breathe a
word about your
loss:
If you can force
your heart and nerve
and sinew
To serve your turn
long after they are
gone,
And so hold on when
there is nothing in
you
Except the Will
which says to them:
"Hold on!"
If you can talk with
crowds and keep your
virtue,
Or walk with Kings -
nor lose the common
touch,
If neither foes nor
loving friends can
hurt you,
If all men count
with you, but none
too much:
If you can fill the
unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds'
worth of distance
run,
Yours is the Earth
and everything
that's in it,
And - which is more
- you'll be a Man,
my son!
~ Rudyard Kipling
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