It wasn't in the library but rather while watching football as a teenager that embattled Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich first heard the Rudyard Kipling poem he has publicly quoted ever since he was arrested last month and accused of attempting to sell the Senate seat vacated by President Obama.
Blagojevich concluded his first press conference Dec. 19, 10 days after he was indicted, by reciting the first verse of Kipling's "If," which is about perseverance in the face of opposition, to emphasize his point that he is being unfairly prosecuted.
In several interviews and press conferences since then, he has regularly repeated lines from the 1910 poem, as well as the final verse of "Ulysses" by Alfred Lord Tennyson.
The frequent poetry references stand in stark contrast to the profane language federal investigators recorded him using on the wiretap that led to his arrest, and has left observers to wonder why he frequently quotes the poem in the media.
"That poem to me really exemplifies the ups and downs and struggles of life, and the need to have perseverance and stick to things and come back, that really make you a person of character," Blagojevich told ABCNews.com.
"You guys can mock the poetry, but they're words I've known for a long time and believe in," he said.
The governor said he first heard the poem recited during a football game sometime around 1980.
"I've known that poem since I was 15 years old," Blagojevich said. "I learned that -- I wish I could tell you I was in a library reading it, but I was watching the NFL in probably 1980, roughly," he said.
An announcer "who had this great voice" recited the poem over film of running backs during a halftime feature, and a young Blagojevich heard "this voice reciting this motivating, inspiring poem, and I said I want to get that poem. So the next day I went to school and got a copy of it and memorized it."