English, asked by jhumajalpai, 4 months ago

plz explain the last stanza of If by rudyard Kipling. pic of the last stanza​

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Answered by srmjothi
2

Answer:

The final verse asserts:

that a person should be able to address and converse with large groups of people and still hold on to his integrity

a man should be able to talk with royalty or nobility and keep from growing arrogant or staying true to himself

If an individual has done nothing wrong, neither his friends nor his enemies should be able to bother or upset him

Everyone should be treated the same and equal in his eyes—but he should favor no particular type of person, race, or creed

Fill every minute of his life with worthwhile projects and stay the course with them—Never waste life’s valuable time

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

When a person is able to do all of these things, then anything is possible. He will become the master of his fate.

And if he can follow these standards, then he will be acclaimed a man in the truest sense of the word.

Explanation:

MARK ME AS A BRAINLIEST!!!

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