Manchester University students paint over Rudyard Kipling poem in 'racism' row - and replace it with this - Manchester Evening News
Manchester University students deface mural containing Kipling poem on grounds that he was a colonialist and racist – Why Evolution Is True
Major General Charles Gordon and casualties of the Egypt and Sudan Campaigns (1882-1885) — Rochester Cathedral
Manchester students deface poem by 'racist' Kipling - BBC News
World War 1 and the Roosevelts: Franklin and Eleanor, Family and Friends - Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute at Hunter College
Manchester students deface poem by 'racist' Kipling. - The Student Room
From Sea to Sea by Rudyard Kipling - Ebook | Scribd
Students deface Kipling poem in UK racism row
Manchester students deface poem by 'racist' Kipling - BBC News
Rudyard Kipling's 'If' poem scrubbed off wall by students who claim he was a 'racist'
Rudyard Kipling: Of course he was racist and an imperialist | OBV
Students deface poem by 'racist' Kipling : r/europe
Review: The British in India: Three Centuries of Ambition and Experience by David Gilmour — why the Raj and empire confound simplistic moral judgement
Major General Charles Gordon and casualties of the Egypt and Sudan Campaigns (1882-1885) — Rochester Cathedral
Falling Idols | Frieze
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Poems we all love, by Montrose L. Barnet
Ladies who do lunch in Kuwait: "If" by Rudyard Kipling
Snowflake students remove Kipling poem after branded racist by SU University of Manchester | UK | News | Express.co.uk
If Poem Stanza Wise Summary | PDF
The Project Gutenberg eBook of From Sea to Sea, by Rudyard Kipling.
Gunga Din by Rudyard Kipling: Racist or Revelatory? - YouTube
Londoners asked what they think of Kipling poem defaced by students | "You don't deface it just because you don't agree with it, free speech's out of the window if you do
If Poem Stanza Wise Summary | PDF
How is Rudyard Kipling's poem 'If' racist? It is obviously sexist, but I cannot see racist undertones in it. - Quora
We can't paint over our racist past | Rudyard Kipling | The Guardian