This journal is mostly public because most of it contains poetry, quotations, pictures, jokes, videos, and news (medical and otherwise). If you like what you see, you are welcome to drop by, anytime. I update frequently.

Layout by tessisamess

Customized by penaltywaltz

Tags

Layout By

Previous | Next
med_cat: (woman reading)
med_cat: (woman reading)

The Servant When He Reigneth

med_cat: (woman reading)
The Servant When He Reigneth


"For three things the earth is disquieted, and for four which it cannot bear. For a servant when he reigneth, and a fool when he is filled with meat; for an odious woman when she is married, and an handmaid that is heir to her mistress." -- PROV. XXX. 21-22-23.

Three things make earth unquiet
And four she cannot brook
The godly Augur counted them
And put them in a book --
Those Four Tremendous Curses
With which mankind is cursed;
But a Servant when He Reigneth
Old Augur entered first.

An Handmaid that is Mistress
We need not call upon.
A Fool when he is full of Meat
Will fall asleep anon.
An Odious Woman Married
May bear a babe and mend;
But a Servant when He Reigneth
Is Confusion to the end.

His feet are swift to tumult,
His hands are slow to toil,
His ears are deaf to reason,
His lips are loud in broil.
He knows no use for power
Except to show his might.
He gives no heed to judgment
Unless it prove him right.

Because he served a master
Before his Kingship came,
And hid in all disaster
Behind his master's name,
So, when his Folly opens
The unnecessary hells,
A Servant when He Reigneth
Throws the blame on some one else.

His vows are lightly spoken,
His faith is hard to bind,
His trust is easy broken,
He fears his fellow-kind.
The nearest mob will move him
To break the pledge he gave --
Oh, a Servant when he Reigneth
Is more than ever slave!
--Rudyard Kipling

Comments

Mar. 1st, 2022 03:40 am (UTC)
Thank you!
med_cat: (woman reading)
Mar. 1st, 2022 10:24 am (UTC)
You're most welcome...someone quoted it in 2014/2015--I looked it up and posted it then, and recent events brought it to mind again...
Mar. 1st, 2022 03:21 pm (UTC)
Relevant any day, really.
med_cat: (Default)
Mar. 1st, 2022 10:52 pm (UTC)
It is indeed
minoanmiss: A detail of the Ladies in Blue fresco (Default)
Mar. 1st, 2022 02:12 pm (UTC)
Oh wow does that remind me of some recent (and not so recent) soi-disant statesmen...

Uncle Rudyard is always my problematic fave. He is so sexist and racist and ethnocentric and YET he almost always hits this stratum of truth about human nature, rendered in singable verse, and no historical fiction writer does better than he does at depicting how people in different time periods thought. I can't help but love his works.
Mar. 1st, 2022 03:27 pm (UTC)
Maybe it's because he honestly believed himself not to be and thought that it's good. You know - a good person in the constraints of his time. After all, even in this poem he postulates that an Odious Woman may mend - much more than many of his contemporaries would do. And he was so careful to acknowledge the basic humanity of the savages, to note and praise their nobler qualities, and so proud and happy about Britain's complete victory over anti-Semitism.
minoanmiss: A detail of the Ladies in Blue fresco (Default)
Mar. 1st, 2022 06:01 pm (UTC)

Yeah, I think you're right. "Female of the Species" is a good example. I once did a paper on anti-Suffrage sentiment in the last century, and I was struck by how most people were saying "women are too weak and stupid to be able to vote". Kipling said, "women are too strong and uncompromising to be allowed to vote". I can't help but be complimented (even though I want my vote).