Rudyard Kipling

The Winners

The Winners - meaning Summary

Triumphant Solitary Speed

Kipling's poem asserts a hard-edged creed of solitary ambition: success comes quickest to the one who abandons companions and helps no one. Through repeated counsel to "travel alone," it valorizes personal speed, risk, and appropriation of reward while casting aid and sympathy as impediments. The closing stanza frames this as a deliberate, heretical maxim—endorsing selfishness as an effective, though morally contentious, strategy for advancement.

Read Complete Analyses

What the moral? Who rides may read. When the night is thick and the tracks are blind A friend at a pinch is a friend, indeed, But a fool to wait for the laggard behind. Down to Gehenna or up to the Throne, He travels the fastest who travels alone. White hands cling to the tightened rein, Slipping the spur from the booted heel, Tenderest voices cry " Turn again!" Red lips tarnish the scabbarded steel, High hopes faint on a warm hearth-stone-- He travels the fastest who travels alone. One may fall but he falls by himself-- Falls by himself with himself to blame. One may attain and to him is pelf-- Loot of the city in Gold or Fame. Plunder of earth shall be all his own Who travels the fastest and travels alone. Wherefore the more ye be helpen-.en and stayed, Stayed by a friend in the hour of toil, Sing the heretical song I have made-- His be the labour and yours be the spoil. Win by his aid and the aid disown-- He travels the fastest who travels alone!

default user
PoetryVerse just now

Feel free to be first to leave comment.

8/2200 - 0