Rudyard Kipling Poems
- 1861
- A Boston Ballad, 1854
- A child said, What is the grass?
- A Child’s Amaze
- A Clear Midnight
- A Farm-Picture
- A Glimpse
- A Hand-Mirror
- A Leaf For Hand In Hand
- A March In The Ranks, Hard-prest
- A Noiseless Patient Spider
- A Paumanok Picture
- A Proadway Pageant
- A Promise To California
- A Riddle Song
- A Sight In Camp
- A Sight In Camp In The Daybreak
- A Song
- A Woman Waits For Me
- Aboard At A Ship’s Helm
- Adieu To A Solider
- After The Sea-Ship
- Ages And Ages, Returning At Intervals
- Ah Poverties, Wincings Sulky Retreats
- All Is Truth
- American Feuillage
- Among The Multitude
- An Army Corps On The March
- Apostroph
- Are You The New Person, Drawn Toward Me?
- As A Strong Bird On Pinious Free
- As Adam, Early In The Morning
- As At Thy Portals Also Death
- As Consequent, Etc.
- As I Ebb’d With the Ocean of Life
- As I Lay With My Head in Your Lap, Camerado
- As I Ponder’d In Silence
- As I Sat Alone By Blue Ontario’s Shores
- As I Walk These Broad, Majestic Days
- As I Watche’d The Ploughman Ploughing
- As If A Phantom Caress’d Me
- As The Time Draws Nigh
- As Toilsome I Wander’d
- Ashes Of Soldiers
- assurances
- Bathed In War’s Perfume
- Beat! Beat! Drums!
- Beautiful Women
- Beginners
- Beginning My Studies
- Behavior
- Behold This Swarthy Face
- Bivouac on a Mountain Side
- Bivouac On A Mountain Side
- Brother Of All, With Generous Hand
- By Broad Potomac’s Shore
- By The Bivouac’s Fitful Flame
- Camps Of Green
- Carol Of Occupations
- Carol Of Words
- Cavalry Crossing A Ford
- Chanting The Square Deific
- City Of Orgies
- City Of Ships
- Come Up From The Fields, Father
- Come, Said My Soul
- Crossing Brooklyn Ferry
- Darest Thou Now O Soul
- Debris
- Delicate Cluster
- Despairing Cries
- Dirge For Two Veterans
- Drum-Taps
- Earth! my Likeness!
- Eidólons
- Elemental Drifts
- Ethiopia Saluting The Colors
- Europe, The 72d And 73d Years Of These States
- Excelsior
- Faces
- Facing West From California’s Shores
- Fast Anchor’d, Eternal, O Love
- For Him I Sing
- For You, O Democracy
- France, The 18th Year Of These States
- From Far Dakota’s Canons
- From My Last Years
- From Paumanok Starting
- From Pent-up Aching Rivers
- Full Of Life, Now
- Germs
- Give Me The Splendid, Silent Sun
- Gliding Over All
- God
- Good-Bye My Fancy!
- Great Are The Myths
- Had I the Choice
- Hast Never Come To Thee An Hour
- Here The Frailest Leaves Of Me
- Here, Sailor
- Hours Continuing Long
- How Solemn As One By One
- Hush’d Be the Camps Today
- I Am He That Aches With Love
- I Dream’d In A Dream
- I Hear America Singing
- I Hear It Was Charged Against Me
- I Heard You, Solemn-sweep Pipes Of The Organ
- I Saw In Louisiana A Live Oak Growing
- I Saw Old General At Bay
- I Sing The Body Electric
- I Sit And Look Out
- I Thought I Was Not Alone
- I Was Looking A Long While
- I Will Take An Egg Out Of The Robin’s Nest
- In Cabin’d Ships At Sea
- In Former Songs
- In Midnight Sleep
- In Paths Untrodden
- In The New Garden In All The Parts
- Inscription
- Italian Music In Dakota
- Joy, Shipmate, Joy!
- Kosmos
- Laws For Creations
- Leaves Of Grass. A Carol Of Harvest For 1867
- Lessons
- Lo! Victress On The Peaks
- Locations And Times
- Long I Thought That Knowledge
- Long, Too Long America
- Look Down, Fair Moon
- Manhattan Streets I Saunter’d, Pondering
- Mannahattan
- Me Imperturbe
- Mediums
- Miracles
- Mother And Babe
- My Picture-Gallery
- Myself And Mine
- Native Moments
- Night On The Prairies
- No Labor-Saving Machine
- Not Heat Flames Up And Consumes
- Not Heaving From My Ribb’d Breast Only
- Not My Enemies Ever Invade Me
- Not The Pilot
- Not Youth Pertains To Me
- Now Finale To The Shore
- Now List To My Morning’s Romanza
- O Bitter Sprig! Confession Sprig!
- O Captain! My Captain!
- O Hymen! O Hymenee!
- O Living Always–Always Dying
- O Me! O Life!
- O Star Of France
- O Sun Of Real Peace
- O Tan-faced Prairie Boy
- O You Whom I Often And Silently Come
- Of Him I Love Day And Night
- Of The Terrible Doubt Of Apperarances
- Of The Visage Of Things
- Offerings
- Old Ireland
- On Journeys Through The States
- On Old Man’s Thought Of School
- On The Beach At Night
- On The Beach At Night, Alone
- Once I Pass’d Through A Populous City
- One Hour To Madness And Joy
- One Song, America, Before I Go
- One Sweeps By
- One’s Self I Sing
- Or From That Sea Of Time
- Other May Praise What They Like
- Out From Behind His Mask
- Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking
- Out of the Rolling Ocean, The Crowd
- Over The Carnage
- Passage To India
- Patroling Barnegat
- Pensive And Faltering
- Pensive On Her Dead Gazing…
- Perfections
- Pioneers! O Pioneers!
- Poem Of Remembrance For A Girl Or A Boy
- Poems Of Joys
- Poets to Come
- Portals
- Prayer Of Columbus
- President Lincoln’s Burial Hymn
- Primeval My Love For The Woman I Love
- Proud Music Of The Storm
- Quicksand Years
- Race Of Veterans
- Reconciliation
- Recorders Ages Hence
- Respondez!
- Rise, O Days
- Roaming In Thought
- Roots And Leaves Themselves Alone
- Salut Au Monde
- Savantism
- Says
- Scented Herbage Of My Breast
- Sea-Shore Memories
- Shut Not Your Doors, &c.
- Sing Of The Banner At Day-Break
- So Far And So Far, And On Toward The End
- So Long
- Solid, Ironical, Rolling Orb
- Sometimes With One I Love
- Song At Sunset
- Song For All Seas, All Ships
- Song of Myself
- Song Of The Broad-Axe
- Song Of The Exposition
- Song Of The Open Road
- Song Of The Redwood-Tree
- Song Of The Universal
- Souvenirs Of Democracy
- Spain 1873-’74
- Sparkles From The Wheel
- Spirit That Form’d This Scene
- Spirit Whose Work Is Done
- Spontaneous Me
- Starting From Paumanok
- States!
- Still, Though The One I Sing
- Tears
- Tests
- That Last Invocation
- That Music Always Round Me
- That Shadow, My Likeness
- The Artilleryman’s Vision
- The Base Of All Metaphysics
- The Centerarian’s Story
- The City Dead-House
- The Dalliance Of The Eagles
- The Indications
- The Last Invocation
- The Mystic Trumpeter
- The Ox tamer
- The Prairie States
- The Prairie-Grass Dividing
- The Runner
- The Ship Starting
- The Singer In The Prison
- The Sleepers
- The Sobbing Of The Bells
- The Torch
- The Unexpressed
- The Untold Want
- The World Below The Brine
- The Wound Dresser
- There Was A Child Went Forth
- These Carols
- These, I, Singing In Spring
- Thick-Sprinkled Bunting
- Think Of The Soul
- This Compost
- This Day, O Soul
- This Dust Was Once The Man
- This Moment, Yearning And Thoughtful
- Thou Orb Aloft Full-Dazzling
- Thou Reader
- Thought
- Thoughts
- To A Certain Cantatrice
- To A Certain Civilian
- To A Common Prostitute
- To A Foil’d European Revolutionaire
- To A Historian
- To A Locomotive In Winter
- To A President
- To A Pupil
- To A Stranger
- To A Western Boy
- To Foreign Lands
- To Him That Was Crucified
- To Old Age
- To One Shortly To Die
- To Oratists
- To Rich Givers
- To The East And To The West
- To The Garden The World
- To The Leaven’d Soil They Trod
- To The Man-of-War-Bird
- To The Reader At Parting
- To The States
- To Thee, Old Cause!
- To Think Of Time
- To You
- Trinckle, Drops
- Turn, O Libertad
- Two Rivulets
- Unfolded Out Of The Folds
- Unnamed Lands
- Vigil Strange I Kept on the Field one Night
- Virginia–The West
- Visor’d
- Voices
- Walt Whitman’s Caution
- Wandering At Morn
- Warble Of Lilac-Time
- We Two Boys Together Clinging
- We Two-How Long We Were Fool’d
- Weave In, Weave In, My Hardy Life
- What Am I After All
- What Best I See In Thee
- What General Has A Good Army
- What Place Is Besieged?
- What Think You I Take My Pen In Hand?
- What Weeping Face
- When I Heard At The Close Of The Day
- When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer
- When I Peruse The Conquer’d Fame
- When I Read The Book
- When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d
- Whispers Of Heavenly Death
- Who Is Now Reading This?
- Who Learns My Lesson Complete?
- Whoever You Are, Holding Me Now In Hand
- With All Thy Gifts
- With Antecedents
- World, Take Good Notice
- Year Of Meteors, 1859 ’60
- Year That Trembled
- Years Of The Modern
- Yet, Yet, Ye Downcast Hours
Rudyard Kipling Biography


Few poets are more beloved by more people than Rudyard Kipling. A favorite of readers both young and old, known the world over, Rudyard Kipling’s poems – and stories – have proven both popular and evergreen.
Born Joseph Rudyard Kipling in 1865, Kipling was the son of Britons born in Bombay, India. At the age of five, young Kipling was sent to England to be educated, a traumatic experience that marked his childhood. Uncomfortable in England, Kipling returned to India as soon as he was able, at the age of 17. Kipling’s first – and only job – was as a writer, beginning as a journalist and editor for a magazine for Britons living in India.
In 1886, Kipling’s first collection of poetry, Departmental Ditties and Other Verses was published. Only two years later, he published his first book of prose, Plain Tales from the Hills.
In the early 1890s, Kipling gained worldwide fame with the publication of Barrack-Room Ballad, in which were two of his most famous poems, the exotic “Gunga Din” and “Mandalay.” These poems brought the experience of Britons in India to the world at large, and only encouraged Kipling to continue to write poems and stories about India, tales and verses of adventure that brought a country unknown to most to readers worldwide.
Kipling married in 1892 and left his beloved India for Vermont, where he continued his fascination with India by writing the two Jungle Books and Kim. For several years he traveled the world, both with his family and alone, spending the Boer War in South Africa, continuing to publish both prose and poetry, including the novel Captains Courageous and Just-So Stories.
In 1901, Kipling and his family settled in Sussex, England, permanently. While in Sussex, Kipling wrote many poems and stories, among them his best-known poem, “If.”
Rudyard Kipling died on January 18, 1936. At the time of his death, he was one of the most famous and beloved authors of his time. From the whimsy and humor of Just-So Stories to the adventure of “Gunga-Din” to the stately advice of “If,” Rudyard Kipling’s writing has proven to be timeless, and still fascinates and delights children and adults alike.
Poems By Rudyard Kipling:
Gunga-Din

If

Seal Lullaby
