If, by Rudyard Kipling

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июл 2024
  • A poem with an excellent popularity-to-title-length ratio.
    The timeless classic. A father talks to his son about how to be a good man. If any son ever lived up to all the virtues described, he would certainly be impressive.
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Комментарии • 657

  • @justaguy6100
    @justaguy6100 18 дней назад +450

    When I was going off to college, my Dad gave me a briefcase, because he didn't know that backpacks were the only thing you used in college for your books. Once I was ready to start interviewing, I decided a more grown-up image would be good, so I went into my closet and pulled out that now dusty briefcase, opening it for the first time. Inside, to my surprise, I saw very nice stationary with my embossed letterhead at the top, as nice pen and pencil set, and a small leather bound book, that only had one thing in it, the poem "If." I've long since lost that little book, sadly, but I keep that poem in my heart always, and recite it from memory whenever asked. Thank you, Dad. I wish I had opened that briefcase much sooner.

    • @fibber2u
      @fibber2u 18 дней назад +13

      What a wow moment!

    • @dal3767
      @dal3767 17 дней назад +9

      None the less you did open it. It reminded you of what a wonderful father had then, as you do now :)

    • @belliott538
      @belliott538 15 дней назад

      Ho..!

    • @justaguy6100
      @justaguy6100 15 дней назад

      @@belliott538 I'm sorry but what do you mean by this exactly?

    • @belliott538
      @belliott538 15 дней назад +7

      @@justaguy6100 It means that I am 100% in agreement with your sentiment... I guess I'm showing my age...
      Ho! was used as a way to show support or agreement and yet not stop the flow of conversation...

  • @faenethlorhalien
    @faenethlorhalien 19 дней назад +495

    "Do you enjoy Kipling?"
    "I don't know, I've never kippled"

    • @FroggattDouglas
      @FroggattDouglas 18 дней назад +10

      He always does make exceedingly good cakes

    • @AndrewHalliwell
      @AndrewHalliwell 18 дней назад +3

      I like his French Fancies.

    • @davey1602
      @davey1602 18 дней назад +3

      @@AndrewHalliwell Can't beat a bit 'o Bakewell Tart ;)

    • @joejohnson6327
      @joejohnson6327 18 дней назад +3

      Never kippled, but this poem sure makes me feel crippled. 🙂

    • @GuntherRommel
      @GuntherRommel 18 дней назад +4

      I love that ancient joke. It's awesome.

  • @blaskowitz7000
    @blaskowitz7000 19 дней назад +400

    Whenever I need Lloyd, he appears.

    • @arrgylerawrgyle3784
      @arrgylerawrgyle3784 19 дней назад +16

      When Lloyd appears, I realized I needed him.

    • @exiletsj2570
      @exiletsj2570 18 дней назад +2

      Sounds like a bit of logistical impossibility but whatever.

    • @Glassdunes
      @Glassdunes 18 дней назад +3

      I forgot how much I missed him

    • @morgang5666
      @morgang5666 18 дней назад +3

      He's merlin

    • @bigblack8900
      @bigblack8900 18 дней назад

      Same here

  • @PjotrFrank
    @PjotrFrank 18 дней назад +93

    "If you can meet with triumph and disaster, and treat those two imposters just the same …" - this verse alone: perfection.

    • @CormanoWild
      @CormanoWild 17 дней назад +1

      - "make sure to blame them both on the Indian, and steal the surplus value of their labor, my son!"

    • @candide1065
      @candide1065 17 дней назад +4

      @@CormanoWild I'd like to have menu 40 without to much spice and a mango juice. Thx, Ranjid.

  • @FroggattDouglas
    @FroggattDouglas 18 дней назад +105

    I didn’t thank him at the time, but Lloyd helped me greatly through the death of my wife and my withdrawal from very bad things five years ago.
    Thank you, Lloyd

  • @DaleyKreations
    @DaleyKreations 17 дней назад +44

    My grandmother gave this poem to my father when he moved away from home. It hung on the wall all through my childhood, the paper yellowing in the frame and getting old. It was my Dad's favorite poem and he would quote parts of it to us when we were upset about some injustice, or point of unfairness - after all it is just as pertinent to daughters as to sons. Eventually he gave it to me to hang in my own house - the same battered and worn copy in it's very 60's frame.
    My father died in March and we went looking for things to display at the wake that reminded us of him, and I took down that battered frame and added it to the box. And now it is back on the wall in my library, to be treasured.

    • @theeddorian
      @theeddorian 17 дней назад +3

      And that story in particular reveals something about both that poem and the expectations of so many who have read it and misunderstood. It was my grandmother, too, who first showed me that poem. There is quite literally nothing at all in the poem that engenders the giver of that advice. Kipling, of course, wrote it, but he said nothing about who is doing the reciting, only whom it is directed to. Considering when it was published, it might well have been Kipling addressing his own son, who would die in just a few years fighting in WW I.

    • @uncletiggermclaren7592
      @uncletiggermclaren7592 14 дней назад

      That's a lovely memory to have.

    • @uncletiggermclaren7592
      @uncletiggermclaren7592 14 дней назад +1

      @@theeddorian I am not convinced that you are right. Even now, when people don't have such clearly defined roles, it is obviously a male voice giving the advice. They are MALE sentiments, MALE considerations.
      For a start, it would never occur to a woman to tell a boy how to be comma "A Man" fullstop
      They would tell him how to be a GOOD man, yes, but that isn't the message.
      None of the things in it, are things a woman would articulate about a man.
      " If you can bear to hear the truth you’ve spoken
      Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,"
      Even if the universe was re-run a million times, that sentiment would never occur to a single woman, to advise her son.

    • @DaleyKreations
      @DaleyKreations 14 дней назад

      @@uncletiggermclaren7592 Although both of us just expressed how it was women who started our families down the "If" path so I don't think your observation tracks. Why would my grandmother give my father a copy if she didn't think it would be a good thing to advise him.
      And my father thought it was important to teach to me, a woman, and my sister, as he felt it was a poem about having honour and integrity which is important, regardless of gender.

    • @theeddorian
      @theeddorian 14 дней назад +2

      @@uncletiggermclaren7592 You are not reading the poem and working to hear the poet's own voice. You are listening from within your particular, individual view point, conditioned by specifc biases you were raised with, or acquired from your situation as you matured. You are hearing your own voice rather than Kipling's.
      "Truth" is not unique to males, nor is being misunderstood, nor is the potential for your ideas being distorted by others. More importantly, your experience is not universal. And even if it were, it didn't teach you about all women. Your generalizations about women are self-evidently mistaken. Possibly, your experience has so frozen your mind that you can't imagine another view point. Many women have raised successful, decent sons while being unmarried or widowed. So, they are quite capable of teaching useful social values. You simply cannot demonstrate any "truth" to your "No woman..." generalizations, and my grandmother would have handed you your head. She rivieted fighters in WW II.

  • @Jamie_kemp
    @Jamie_kemp 19 дней назад +84

    Believe it or not I’ve never heard this, and it came at a good time. Thank you

    • @denispol79
      @denispol79 18 дней назад +2

      That's good, bro)
      Just gave it a thought - there's a hardly any kind of days, it won't come just on time.

    • @whiggles9203
      @whiggles9203 18 дней назад +4

      Kipling is great

    • @alialmans
      @alialmans 18 дней назад +3

      Same here, thank you Lloyd :)

    • @meloearth
      @meloearth 5 дней назад

      There's always a first time.

  • @LeafyMouse4478
    @LeafyMouse4478 19 дней назад +108

    This is my father’s favorite poem. Glad to see it getting some love any time I am down or need to remember him I always read it.

    • @CormanoWild
      @CormanoWild 17 дней назад

      *was

    • @LeafyMouse4478
      @LeafyMouse4478 17 дней назад +2

      @@CormanoWild are you assuming my father is dead he is not hence why I said is not was

  • @Ms24richard
    @Ms24richard 18 дней назад +71

    The little head rub and "son" choked me up a little bit.
    God bless this man

    • @igstan
      @igstan 18 дней назад +4

      He was choking up a bit too at the end. I found that very touching 🥹

  • @Le_Trouvere
    @Le_Trouvere 18 дней назад +24

    This poem is peak masculinity, and wonderfully recited, Mr Beige.

    • @fireaza
      @fireaza 18 дней назад +4

      Specifically, peak *positive* masculinity. This is what we should be teaching our boys to be like, rather than the "A man takes what what he wants, from whoever he wants. If they're too weak to stop you, that's their fault." that our society idealizes.

    • @klosnj11
      @klosnj11 8 дней назад +2

      ​@@fireaza I am unsure of what society you are living in, but it is not mine.
      The society I grew up in taught neither your portrayal nor that of this poems. It gave young men...nothing. Empty meaningless platitudes; "just be yourself", "money cant buy happiness", "be the change you want to see in the world" and so on. Nothing to direct us, nor give us clue of where to go, what to do. We were told we would do great things, change the world, right wrongs. But the first wrongs that need to be righted are within. No one showed us how to fix ourselves, not even how to look within to see our flaws.

  • @geekstradamus1548
    @geekstradamus1548 18 дней назад +85

    Thank you!
    At a celebration for my son graduating from college, I told him, “Ok, I only one more piece of advice, and then I’ll have taught you everything I could have possibly taught you.”
    What’s that?
    Dropped this from memory. Tears all around the table.

    • @CormanoWild
      @CormanoWild 17 дней назад +6

      Did you pick it back up in case you needed it later??

    • @geekstradamus1548
      @geekstradamus1548 17 дней назад +2

      @@CormanoWild nah, only time I needed it. ;)

  • @kinchan4548
    @kinchan4548 18 дней назад +30

    THAT HEAD RUB AT THE ENDDDD DAMNNNN
    LLOYD IS THE FATHER WE ALL NEED

  • @FelixstoweFoamForge
    @FelixstoweFoamForge 19 дней назад +59

    Fecking beautiful rule to live by. And as a mental health nurse, there are days when I really need to remember it.

    • @stefa4013
      @stefa4013 18 дней назад +8

      Keep up the good work and thanks for your service towards the vulnerable

  • @iainbaker6916
    @iainbaker6916 16 дней назад +4

    Best poem ever. This needs to be taught in schools and recited often.

  • @theflare5437
    @theflare5437 19 дней назад +45

    Lindybeige never misses I swear.

    • @Gerle71
      @Gerle71 18 дней назад +3

      He missed the Hannibal deadline by a lot!

    • @theflare5437
      @theflare5437 18 дней назад +6

      @@Gerle71 I stand corrected. Rarely ever misses.

    • @Gerle71
      @Gerle71 18 дней назад +1

      @@theflare5437 🤣 👍

  • @peternormand4094
    @peternormand4094 19 дней назад +89

    This is one of my favorite poems of all time. My dad would read this to us frequently before bed. You did a very food job of it, thank you.

    • @peternormand4094
      @peternormand4094 19 дней назад +5

      Also, please continue to do poetry.

    • @LeafyMouse4478
      @LeafyMouse4478 18 дней назад +1

      @@peternormand4094 my father would do the same

    • @TheSourcealpha
      @TheSourcealpha 18 дней назад +3

      Classic dad move.... My dad gifted me a booklet of the poem when I was born and I always carry it in my backpack.

    • @draconyster
      @draconyster 18 дней назад

      @@peternormand4094 the author was a pretty horrible racist though

    • @peternormand4094
      @peternormand4094 18 дней назад +5

      ​@@draconyster And he wrote propaganda for the British during WW1, and he used his influence to give his son a position as an officer in the British army- dispite his bad eyesight. He died in his first engagement. None of this makes him less of a great poet, none of this makes IF any less of an influential poem in the lives of many people, even to this day. Separate the artist from the art, man, and appreciate it for what it is.

  • @ronmaximilian6953
    @ronmaximilian6953 18 дней назад +9

    Now this is a poem that every boy should have memorized before he enters high school and be able to fully explain before he graduates.

  • @lornenoland8098
    @lornenoland8098 15 дней назад +6

    Sometimes, words on a page alone cannot convey the true meaning of the text. It requires verbalization, by a skilled orator, with all the subtle shifts in tone and emphasis, to give life and substance and understanding of the message to the intended recipients.
    Well done, sir.

  • @nicholasking6066
    @nicholasking6066 18 дней назад +14

    You deliver that speak with the pose and cadence and emotion and thought and contemplation of one who has been there and learned the virtues therein.

  • @prnjrr1783
    @prnjrr1783 18 дней назад +10

    This has to be the best reading of this poem I’ve heard. It’s the first time it actually made sense hearing it.

  • @4801534501
    @4801534501 19 дней назад +12

    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!

  • @donnyaxe78
    @donnyaxe78 18 дней назад +7

    A beautifully delivered monologue, and the pat on the head and dismissive shoo off was icing on the cake.

  • @evant41
    @evant41 19 дней назад +37

    Always loved this poem, beautiful to hear Lindy do it.
    Damn that 4th wall emphatic eye contact.

  • @clarabrown9743
    @clarabrown9743 18 дней назад +17

    Very well recited, Lloyd. And a nice little 'off you go, lad' at the end.

  • @rikiba851
    @rikiba851 19 дней назад +17

    If you can be perfection, then perfection is your reward.
    But know that perfection is the dream just out of grasp, and to chase it is the daily toil of a fool.
    The world makes many fools.
    I'm yet to see perfect.

  • @danielc9312
    @danielc9312 18 дней назад +7

    Rudyard Kipling was always my favorite author when I was a kid. I had a few books with a collection of his poems and short stories.

  • @NaN-Gram
    @NaN-Gram 19 дней назад +18

    My dad loves this poem, he reads it to me all the time!

  • @wymanbartlett4648
    @wymanbartlett4648 15 дней назад

    My father grounded me until I could recite this when I got into trouble as a teen. Brings back memories.

  • @mattturner6017
    @mattturner6017 19 дней назад +9

    One of the most beautiful hypotheticals ever put to paper.

  • @RadishAcceptable
    @RadishAcceptable 19 дней назад +33

    I felt that head rub. That was strange, lol.

  • @adriandreamwalker1027
    @adriandreamwalker1027 13 дней назад

    Thank you Lindy! You truly are like Indiana Jones' father, but more lovable and loving.

  • @ElThomsono
    @ElThomsono 15 дней назад +1

    It's been a long day, with its ups and downs. I'm not quite sure how I'm feeling about myself, or anything. Ended up out in the garden smoking a cigar, in the downtime I opened RUclips which served me this. Cheers Lloyd, keep on keeping on.

  • @christosvoskresye
    @christosvoskresye 18 дней назад +16

    I remember years ago hearing a song, "I Don't Believe in IF Anymore." But that was a typo. It should have been, "I Don't Believe in GOTO Anymore."
    The era of great FORTRAN-based songs has sadly come to an end.

    • @memkiii
      @memkiii 18 дней назад +2

      I C, Basic, but still a Perl for the whole Assembly . I certainly Can't Bash it.

    • @kleinweichkleinweich
      @kleinweichkleinweich 17 дней назад

      believe what you want but THEN will add some consequences to it and ELSE will catch you all

    • @christosvoskresye
      @christosvoskresye 16 дней назад

      @@kleinweichkleinweich It's a COMMON mistake.

  • @zalibecquerel3463
    @zalibecquerel3463 18 дней назад +22

    As the great philosopher Alan Partridge said: "If you do X, Y, and Z, Bob's your uncle".

  • @janerkenbrack3373
    @janerkenbrack3373 18 дней назад +6

    I was gifted this when I turned 13, and had it memorized within a week. And though I can't say that I've modeled my life on this poem, there hasn't been a year when it didn't come to mind, and many times I've checked myself against it.
    And by the way, nice job in delivery.

  • @richardpetervonrahden6393
    @richardpetervonrahden6393 17 дней назад +1

    Best rendition of this poem I have seen.

  • @MustafaKulle
    @MustafaKulle 18 дней назад +3

    I have read this poem many times. But having it read to me by Lindybeige was an unexpected joy to behold. Thank you, Nikolas.

  • @paulschumacher4308
    @paulschumacher4308 17 дней назад +1

    The wisdom of this poem is really heavy.

  • @pallidbustofpallas4679
    @pallidbustofpallas4679 18 дней назад +10

    This was an excellent reading. Kipling would approve!

  • @DenysBuryi
    @DenysBuryi 17 дней назад

    Gave me chills. While listening I realised - the poem describes the man I strive to be. Beautifully put.

  • @kalquien
    @kalquien 18 дней назад +3

    One of the best poems in the English language. You deliver it well.

  • @TheBaconMagician
    @TheBaconMagician 19 дней назад +5

    I saw the title and instantly remembered this poem from decades ago. Thanks for sharing :)

  • @novalicious8589
    @novalicious8589 18 дней назад +4

    What serendipity! I just saw Michael Caine read this for the first time a few days ago. This poem has been on my mind ever since. Here Lindybeige puts up his reading two hours ago! I needed this! Thank you Lloyd!!!

  • @MemphiStig
    @MemphiStig 18 дней назад +1

    I've thought about this many times since I read it (repeatedly) on the wall of a high school classroom long ago. Still profound. Still true. Still a standard worthy of upholding. Even if you're not a son.

  • @gbentley8176
    @gbentley8176 18 дней назад +1

    Absolutely love Kipling. My two treasures are the Jungle Book and Stalky and Co. Assembly Reading prizes from the fifties. So sad the author lost his son in the Great War.

  • @AtheAetheling
    @AtheAetheling 18 дней назад +1

    I'm more of a 'Mandalay' man myself, but this is just a wonderful poem. Always has been.

  • @_Michiel_
    @_Michiel_ 17 дней назад

    I must admit that I wasn't acquainted yet with this poem.
    BUT when I saw Lindy and Kipling on the thumbnail, I knew this would be great. Kipling and Lindy never disappoint and in this case both surpassed expectations.
    Love for Lindybeige.
    Love for Kipling.

  • @runswithcows
    @runswithcows 18 дней назад +1

    I was eleven when my mother gave me my first copy. I'm nearly sixty now and a copy sits in a frame on my wall. All these years I have tried to live up to those words and failed. I know now, it's the trying that counts.

  • @haydenbsiegel
    @haydenbsiegel 17 дней назад +2

    Thanks for telling me to "Hold on" Lindy. I know it wasn't personal, but I needed to hear it. I rattled a cage and made some enemies who beside someone as small as I appear to be giants, but I now have allies to. I just needed to hold on and should I fall into the mud then maybe the one behind me can use my fall to make it through the muck.

  • @Diklyquill
    @Diklyquill 17 дней назад +1

    thank you for introducing some of us to this poem, i for one am quite glad to now be aware of the existence of such... but not too glad

  • @calamusgladiofortior2814
    @calamusgladiofortior2814 8 дней назад

    An excellent reading of a superb poem. I’ve read it many times, and will teach these words to my daughter because the virtues in them are universal.

  • @crstewart3705
    @crstewart3705 18 дней назад +1

    One of my favorite poems, it hit me on a whole new level once I memorized it.

  • @patricknorthrup7708
    @patricknorthrup7708 14 дней назад

    My grandfather would recite this poem whenever I acted up as a kid 😂 I needed to hear this today.

  • @Dsuranix
    @Dsuranix 18 дней назад +4

    my grandpa loved kipling, and now i love kipling.

  • @jovensockmuppet3649
    @jovensockmuppet3649 17 дней назад

    I have listened to this poem read by so many people and actors, this was the absolute best. Well done, Sir.

  • @RaveShaman
    @RaveShaman 12 дней назад

    had this poem on a picture frame above my bed.... my father had me recite it every night when he put me to bed.

  • @Gilbrae
    @Gilbrae 18 дней назад

    If you can listen to these measured and wise words, without losing yourself in ecstasy, proclaiming "Great words! Great meaning!“, while forgetting in your exultation the meaning of these precious advice... then your mind will remain young until the end.
    Thank you for this very insightful reading/play/thing. During these times of confusion that the world is currently going through, this kind of words could be useful.

  • @gmach13
    @gmach13 16 дней назад

    i had to memorise this poem in the 6th grade (12 yrs old) and have not applied the ideals ever really. Thankyou Lindybeige!

  • @passengerplanetearth
    @passengerplanetearth 18 дней назад

    Lindy, you have excelled yourself. I have loved this poem for 50 years or more and you have really brought it home. Best reading ever! :-)

  • @carlnietoweise4653
    @carlnietoweise4653 18 дней назад +2

    Maybe my favorite poem, ever! Every boy should read this and have it explained to him, thank you, Lloyd, well done!

  • @spacemandan5906
    @spacemandan5906 17 дней назад

    Move to tears - beautiful.

  • @krisdog88
    @krisdog88 18 дней назад +1

    I'm absolutley going to teach this poem to my 7th grade English classes this year - and use your video to do it. Just so you know. Well done, sir.

  • @marlinperkins6910
    @marlinperkins6910 11 дней назад

    This is my favorite poem. I choke up every time I hear it.

  • @vincentcleaver1925
    @vincentcleaver1925 18 дней назад +1

    This always makes me happy cry. GD imperialist spoke to Scots Irish cur dogs (like me), everywhere and for all time...
    My favorite is 'The Sons of Martha', but I love the dog poem too

  • @CouchCoop128
    @CouchCoop128 18 дней назад +1

    The classic British father ending...off you pop, I've said my piece, love it, what an inspiration that poem is,
    I've been single handily running a failing YT channel for 8yrs.
    Those words...they hit me different now as an older man...
    Thanks for reminding me, why we do all this, 🙏
    I was due an update 🤣

  • @nataliecochrane1111
    @nataliecochrane1111 17 дней назад

    I rarely rewatch a video - who has the time for that? - but this one was an exception. And you know what really made it for me? That little ‘be off with you’ wave of the hand at the end, as if the whole outpouring of wisdom was an accidental letting down of a stoic father’s guard. Lovely touch!

  • @2ndviolin
    @2ndviolin 16 дней назад +1

    Nicely read. It makes me think of the officers of the lost British Empire.

  • @SkyOctopus1
    @SkyOctopus1 16 дней назад +1

    Good god, you needed to appear in my English class about 25 years ago. Kipling would have made sense. Or, perhaps, I needed today's brain back there. Either way, I hadn't looked back on it or since enjoyed it until now.

  • @richardhillman9745
    @richardhillman9745 18 дней назад +1

    Please Lloyd, do a series and read all the Kipling poems, it would be awesome!

  • @ericfeldkamp3788
    @ericfeldkamp3788 18 дней назад +1

    The only poem i committed to memory.

  • @douglasmoffat6560
    @douglasmoffat6560 14 дней назад

    Beautifullly done! I feel sure Kipling would be really pleased to hear that poem recited just that way!

  • @myparceltape1169
    @myparceltape1169 18 дней назад +1

    A soldier's poet but one whose son was a soldier in WW1.
    Among the lost.
    Kipling wrote good poetry.

  • @WearyWizard
    @WearyWizard 18 дней назад +2

    Easily my Favourite poem, I always listen to someone reciting it to see how they do it

  • @robertsemon1712
    @robertsemon1712 18 дней назад

    If only this were Rudyard Kipling’s most influential work. Truly an inspirational text, and quite demonstrative of Kipling’s talent. Sadly, that honor falls to The White Man’s Burden.

  • @Clive_Warren
    @Clive_Warren 19 дней назад +114

    If… you ever finish Hannibal.

    • @peterwolf4230
      @peterwolf4230 19 дней назад +5

      I don't understand why he doesn't release the first half (if he' and the artist have managed that).

    • @suburbanbanshee
      @suburbanbanshee 19 дней назад +11

      Good things come to those who wait.

    • @Clive_Warren
      @Clive_Warren 19 дней назад +8

      @@suburbanbanshee 8 years?

    • @SueMyChin
      @SueMyChin 18 дней назад

      "For God's sake, me belly ache."

    • @XtecHubble
      @XtecHubble 18 дней назад +13

      If you can manage to wait.. 😂

  • @Wylde_Coyote
    @Wylde_Coyote 11 дней назад +1

    A perfect rendition. Believe it or not I am actually related to Rudyard, on my Father's side. Shame his grasp of the English language didn't rub off.

  • @MattJoyce01
    @MattJoyce01 18 дней назад

    So...do I need to meet all those conditions, or just a couple?
    Please let this become the definitive rendition of a fantastic poem.

  • @amafuji
    @amafuji 18 дней назад +1

    Love this poem and The Stranger

  • @phlogistanjones2722
    @phlogistanjones2722 17 дней назад

    Thanks Dad!
    .... I mean... thank you Lloyd. That was a lovely and stirring rendition.
    Peaceful Skies.

  • @markfergerson2145
    @markfergerson2145 18 дней назад

    That may have been Britain’s favorite poem in 1997, but from this American’s perspective it seems that it has been largely forgotten in the time since. (Things aren’t any better here.)
    No matter, as long as some of us do remember and try to live by it, men and true manhood shall survive.
    Excelsior!

  • @Wertical93
    @Wertical93 18 дней назад

    This video showed up in a very messy time of my life. Thank you Lord of Beige.

  • @shaan4308
    @shaan4308 18 дней назад +4

    That Lindybeige smile followed by squint at 0:04 ...so precious

  • @spamhonx56
    @spamhonx56 18 дней назад +2

    Ah, in one of your recent videos you mentioned filling the unforgiving minute with sixty seconds worth of distance run, and i knew i had to go an have a re-read of this poem, as well as Invictus, and The road not taken.

  • @amazingbollweevil
    @amazingbollweevil 18 дней назад +1

    I well up when I try to read that poem outloud, too.

  • @YvonneWilson312
    @YvonneWilson312 18 дней назад +4

    A simply sublime rendition, as we all knew it would be.

  • @Zayphar
    @Zayphar 19 дней назад +10

    Bravo. Well done.

  • @truder55
    @truder55 18 дней назад +5

    So impressive a performance Lindy, thank you

  • @85Funkadelic
    @85Funkadelic 18 дней назад +1

    If you've got even one or two of these you are doing great!

  • @James_I_Archer
    @James_I_Archer 18 дней назад +1

    First time I’ve heard this really great just what I needed to hear ❤

  • @garyK.45ACP
    @garyK.45ACP 18 дней назад +1

    2024 version: "If you can keep your head, when all around you are losing theirs...you've found someone to blame it on!"

  • @kitten_processing_inc4415
    @kitten_processing_inc4415 17 дней назад

    My dad was a bit of a hard horse old bugger, being a WW2 veteran from the USMC. Hard to please, he was. Imagine my surprise when he said to me of this poem "Always seemed like a bit of a tall order to me"!

  • @kiplingslastcat
    @kiplingslastcat 18 дней назад +1

    That was an excellent reading! Well done!

  • @Jubilo1
    @Jubilo1 16 дней назад

    Superb naration, dressed as a proper gent. Kudos to you sir!

  • @Ishownospeed1238
    @Ishownospeed1238 12 дней назад

    Excellent work Lloyd. Extolling timeless virtues that every young man should hear. I shall be sharing with my two young sons this weekend

  • @markedis5902
    @markedis5902 18 дней назад

    Best reading of that poem ever

  • @DrKaill
    @DrKaill 18 дней назад

    Great poem and exceptional reading. This poem encapsulates so many important life lessons.

  • @MegaSnegovichok
    @MegaSnegovichok 18 дней назад

    My son loved your reading!

  • @mikewilburn5884
    @mikewilburn5884 9 дней назад

    Well done. Thank you for your time and have a lovely day.

  • @erikjames3361
    @erikjames3361 18 дней назад

    Stop being so GD wholesome brother 😭😭😭 I could weep an ocean of regret for failing to be more like you ❤

  • @Kargoneth
    @Kargoneth 18 дней назад +1

    You are very good at this. Charismatic Lloyd.