Rudyard Kipling

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Standard Name: Kipling, Rudyard
Birth Name: Joseph Rudyard Kipling
An Indian-born English journalist, novelist, and travel writer, best-known for short stories, poetry, and children's books, RK won the Nobel Prize for Literature. He never felt like a native in England although he spent most of his life there, lived in other countries as well, and never saw India after his mid-twenties. He was convinced of the moral mission of the British empire, seeing devoted heroism in its workers but pettiness and bureaucracy in its administration. He writes of India as an insider and his Indian writings were his best loved in England. His increasingly conservative politics seeped into his writing later in his career and lost him some of the immense, immediate public interest that his early work had garnered.

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Marghanita Laski
ML felt that Kipling was undervalued as a poet by her generation, for political rather than literary reasons. She selected and edited a volume of his poems (Kipling's English History) for the BBC in 1974.
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
Textual Production B. M. Croker
The Road to Mandalay: A Tale of Burma, a late example of BMC 's British Raj novels, was titled from a popular Kipling poem whose speaker is a former British soldier who is...
Textual Production Flora Annie Steel
Lâl, composed in Aberdeenshire, was rejected by several minor periodicals (to which Richard Gillies Hardy had suggested FAS should send it) but accepted at first sight by Mowbray Morris of Macmillan's Magazine (who...
Textual Production E. Nesbit
It had previously been serialized from May 1905 to May 1906. Its treatment of ancient Egyptian magic owes a good deal to the information she received from Ernest Wallis Budge , Keeper of Egyptian and...
Textual Production Noel Streatfeild
NS published The Fearless Treasure, A Story of England from Then to Now, which (contrary to her usual habit but like well-known books by E. Nesbit and Rudyard Kipling ) carries present-day children back into history.
Wilson, Barbara Ker. Noel Streatfeild. Bodley Head.
27
Textual Production Laurence Hope
LH began writing poetry during her adolescence: sources differ as to how much of her juvenile writing she destroyed, although enough remained for the posthumous publication of Laurence Hope's Poems in 1907. Noting certain biographical...
Textual Production Mary Angela Dickens
MAD wrote frequently for The Windsor Magazine, interviewing authors for it at the turn of the century. In a study of the magazine's issues of the early 1910s, Robert Scholes argues that the presence...
Textual Production Elspeth Huxley
Nicholls feels that Norah Smallwood missed a trick by failing to jump at the chance when EH first suggested a sequel to The Flame Trees of Thika, which she did when delivering the first...
Textual Production Naomi Jacob
Under her pseudonym of Ellington Gray, NJ published a novel entitled Saffroned Bridesails, a phrase which she found in a poem by Kipling .
TLS Centenary Archive Centenary Archive [1902-2012]. http://www.gale.com/c/the-times-literary-supplement-historical-archive.
(29 March 1928): 241
Jacob, Naomi. Me: A Chronicle about Other People. Hutchinson.
240-1
Textual Production Naomi Jacob
She wrote to Kipling to enquire the meaning of the words and he reproved her for using them without understanding them.
Jacob, Naomi. Me: A Chronicle about Other People. Hutchinson.
240-1
Textual Production Berta Ruck
The title derives from the refrain to Kipling 's The Ladies: An' I learned about women from 'er!
Kipling, Rudyard. Collected Verse of Rudyard Kipling. Hodder and Stoughton.
408
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Rose Macaulay
One of the essays, Into Human Speech, deplores sloppy uses of language while agreeing that certain misuses may be strategic. It also considers the class differences in language use.
Bensen, Alice. Rose Macaulay. Twayne.
94
RM imagines the phrase...
Wealth and Poverty Dorothy Bussy
At these times they rented out La Souco, a practice which became an important source of income. Their tenants included Rudyard Kipling , George Mallory , and André Malraux ; André Gide and Julian Morrell

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