what according to kipling is the only penalty youth must pay for possessing it's enviable privileges ?
Answers
Answered by
0
Answer:
ignoring people listening people
Answered by
0
Answer:
The only penalty youth must pay for its amazing privileges is to listen to elders who are, sadly, older and believed to be wiser. On such occasions, the youth pretends to be interested and revered, while the elderly strives to appear pious. They both feel uncomfortable with the pretence.
Explanation:
- The main idea of the poem "If" is a successful, moral life based on principles of honesty, moral behavior, and self-improvement.
- Every reader will understand from the poem what it means to develop into a full man and how he handles life's ups and downs.
- Life has significance only when it has been lived meaningfully.
- Our true human identity can only be confirmed if we live virtuously by adhering to a system of high moral rules and behaviour.
- "If" by Rudyard Kipling serves as a model for all the traits and characteristics we need to cultivate in order to call ourselves whole people and to experience genuine success in life.
- Kipling embraces the characteristics of calmness, patience, integrity, humility, control, endurance, tolerance, resolve, and confidence over the length of the poem's thirty-two lines.
- This poem serves as a kind of guide to mastering the art of life and being human.
#SPJ3
Similar questions