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 |
---|---|---|
Intertextuality and Influence | B. M. Croker | |
Intertextuality and Influence | Jennifer Johnston | The title is quoted from Kipling
's Recessional, a poem about the end of empire. |
Leisure and Society | Eliza Lynn Linton | She enjoyed going to and hosting prominent literary and social receptions. Her guests included a wide range of people: popular writers such as Rudyard Kipling
, Marie Corelli
, and Frank Harris
; luminaries of... |
Leisure and Society | Lady Margaret Sackville | Here, as in Edinburgh, she entered energetically into local literary life. She was the first president (for two terms) of the North Gloucestershire (Cheltenham) Centre of Poetry
, and during the second world war... |
Literary responses | Flora Annie Steel | The Spectator review found this volume to be marked by appreciation of the oriental standpoint, both ethical and religious. qtd. in “Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC. 156 |
Literary responses | Ethel M. Dell | She judged that EMD
dealt honestly with human feelings, with the problems of the heart and the conscience. Nor was it, she insisted, absurd to compare her with Euripides
or Shakespeare
; in an image... |
Literary responses | Rosamund Marriott Watson | William Archer
included RMW
alongside A. E. Housman
, Rudyard Kipling
, Alice Meynell
, E. Nesbit
, and William Butler Yeats
in Poets of the Younger Generation (1902). Archer, William. Poets of the Younger Generation. John Lane, Bodley Head, 1902. vii-viii |
Literary responses | Flora Annie Steel | Among the chorus of praise which greeted this novel, FAS
most cherished a letter from a man whose wife had died in the Mutiny, telling her that her work had enabled, him, at last, to... |
Literary responses | Ethel M. Dell | Edward John Thompson
in The Other Side of the Medal, 1925, blamed EMD
's writings (along with those of Kipling
and Maud Oliver
) for spreading misconceptions about life in India. Dell, Penelope. Nettie and Sissie. Hamish Hamilton, 1977. 69 |
Literary responses | Flora Annie Steel | An early study of FAS
's writings was A Star of India by Daya Patwardhan
, complete with a bibliographical list of her works and investigation of her real-life sources. Powell, Violet. Flora Annie Steel: Novelist of India. Heinemann, 1981. 69 |
Literary responses | E. Nesbit | Rudyard Kipling
wrote to EN
in amusing detail about his kiddies' delight in the version published in the Strand. Briggs, Julia. A Woman of Passion: The Life of E. Nesbit, 1858-1924. Hutchinson, 1987. 254-5 |
Literary responses | Elinor Glyn | This novella led to the widespread use of the term It: Whether you had It or not became the burning question of the day. Etherington-Smith, Meredith, and Jeremy Pilcher. The "It" Girls. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1986. 240 |
Literary responses | E. Nesbit | Again Kipling
wrote comically about the effect of her work in his household: how the governess had to read it aloud again and again, and his wife just all the time, and himself too, but... |
Literary responses | Menella Bute Smedley | The small Rudyard Kipling
, at a miserable time in his young life, was stirred and enchanted by this book and one of its sequels, Child-Nature, even though he later remembered neither the authors'... |
Literary responses | Juliana Horatia Ewing | She was reciprocally admired by Ruskin
in the nineteenth century, and admired also by Kipling
in the twentieth. Critic Mary Lascelles
lamented at the centenary of JHE
's death that her books had been allowed... |
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Texts
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