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Rudyard KiplingA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Despite being rigorously structured and carefully metered, “Gunga Din” sounds casual, informal—like a person talking.
The poem is divided into five 17-line stanzas that follow the chronological order typical of a narrative. Kipling creates a subtle patterning for rhymes that is consistent without being insistent. The rhyme scheme is AABCCBDDEFFEGGFGGHG, a back-and-forth rhyming pattern in which every sixth line echoes a word from a previous triplet—bookends that echo the poem’s framing device of a speaker looking back. The rhyme scheme mimics the vehicle of memory, with the speaker moving back and forth in time as he retells the story of the water-bearer.
To create the effect of the speaker talking to his buddies, the meter reflects conversational rhythms, avoiding a singsong approach. Kipling alternates lines of eight syllables (iambic tetrameter) with lines of six syllables (iambic trimeter). Each stanza closes with a quintain in which one or more lines actually has ten syllables. This metric variation, along with enjambment (lines that move into the next line without end-punctuation), gives the poem its immediacy and encourages recitation that seems unforced.
By Rudyard Kipling
If—
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Kim
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Lispeth
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Rikki Tikki Tavi
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Seal Lullaby
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The Conundrum of the Workshops
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The Jungle Book
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The Man Who Would Be King
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The Mark Of The Beast
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The White Man's Burden
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