Rudyard Kipling
-
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 |
---|---|---|
Reception | Jane Austen | JA
's early admirers among her fellow women writers constituted a small, select band. They included Sarah Harriet Burney
, Anne Grant
, Mary Ann Kelty
, Maria Callcott
, Maria Jane Jewsbury
, Harriet Martineau |
Reception | Constance Naden | A propos her enthusiastic reception CN
observed (quoting Rudyard Kipling
) that she was beginning to consider myself a sort of Solar Myth. qtd. in Hughes, William Richard et al. Constance Naden: A Memoir. Bickers and Son, 1890. 54 |
Residence | Michael Field | In 1890 they moved to a house called Durdans in Reigate, where they remained until 1899. Blain, Virginia, and Isobel Grundy. Emails about Michael Field to Isobel Grundy. 26 May 2005. Armstrong, Isobel et al., editors. Nineteenth-Century Women Poets. Clarendon Press, 1996. 695 |
Textual Features | Clotilde Graves | In the novel itself the dedication's style is somewhat modified by narration and dialogue. Set largely during the siege of Mafeking in the Boer War (which began in October 1899), this highly coloured and broadly... |
Textual Features | Carol Ann Duffy | Many poems here feature women answering back to canonical male voices: Liz Lochhead
to Donne
, Jenny Joseph
to W. S. Gilbert
, U. A. Fanthorpe
to Walt Whitman
, Wendy Cope
to A. E. Housman |
Textual Features | Beatrice Harraden | They mention the need for new funds and the way they will supplement previous subscriptions. Harraden, Beatrice, and Elizabeth Robins. “The Sussex Hospital”. Times Literary Supplement, No. 934, 11 Dec. 1919, p. 750. 750 |
Textual Features | Constance Smedley | This contains eight stories reminiscent in their titles of Rudyard Kipling
's Just So Stories: How the Horse Looked Ahead, How the Swallows Learned the Song, and so on. In the latter... |
Textual Features | Elizabeth B. Lester | |
Textual Features | Joanna Cannan | Ithuriel's Hour is titled from a poem by Kipling
called The Hour of the Angel, which foretells that Ithuriel's Hour / Will spring on us, for the first time, the test which will allocate... |
Textual Features | Constance Lytton | Most of the letters here are addressed to CL
's mother, her editor-sister, and two close friends who were also relations, her aunt Theresa Earle
and her cousin Adela Smith
. Balfour, Elizabeth Edith, Countess of, and Constance Lytton. “Preface, Introduction”. Letters of Constance Lytton, edited by Elizabeth Edith, Countess of Balfour and Elizabeth Edith, Countess of Balfour, Heinemann, 1925, p. v, xi - xv. v |
Textual Features | Ethel M. Dell | She began writing about British India, which she learned about from younger cousins and from the works of Flora Annie Steel
, Maud Diver
, Alice Perrin
, F. E. Penney
, and Rudyard Kipling
. Dell, Penelope. Nettie and Sissie. Hamish Hamilton, 1977. 21 |
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 | 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 | 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, 1933. 240-1 |
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