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Rudyard Kipling. Cecil Vicars Jared Eckardt Period 5. Background Info. Born in Pompay Educated at England in the United Services college. How he was known. Became known early with his poetry
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Background Info • Born in Pompay • Educated at England in the United Services college
How he was known • Became known early with his poetry • Became known better for his short story writer for his portrayals of the people, history, and culture of his times
Early life • After a spell at boarding school, Kipling returned to India by himself, to Lahore where his parents now were, in 1881. • He began working as a newspaper editor for a local edition and started beginning his poetry • His first professional sales were in 1883.
1880’s • By the mid 1880s he was travelling around the subcontinent as a correspondent for the Allahabad Pioneer. • His fiction sales began to bloom, and he published six short books of short stories in 1888
Stories and America • His first story “The Light that Failed” was published in 1890 • He lived in Vermont for 4 years because of bank problems • While in America he wrote his most famous work “The Jungle Book” and the “The Second Jungle Book”
Later Life • Kipling and his in laws got in a fight so they moved back to England • During the first decade of the 20th century, Kipling was at the height of his popularity. • In 1907 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature • He died of a brain haemorrhage in early 1936.
George Orwell Review • During five literary generations every enlightened person has despised him • Kipling is in the position of having been a byword for fifty years
He is racist • You can not say that when Kipling describes a British soldier beating a “racial term for a black boy" with a cleaning rod in order to get money out of him, he is acting merely as a reporter and does not necessarily approve what he sees • There is no sign anywhere in Kipling's work that he disapproves of the conduct
Bible References • Much of Kiplingsphraesology is taken from the bible • He used Psalm cxxvii: "Except the lord build the house, they labour in vain that build it; except the Lord keep the city, the watchman waketh but in vain.” to express opinion • For heathen heart that puts her trustIn reeking tube and iron shard,All valiant dust that builds on dust,And guarding, calls not Thee to guard,For frantic boast and foolish word — Thy mercy on Thy People, Lord!
Ideas in His Work • Rudyard Kipling was, in his grand style, the bard of British Imperialism, and in his dialect poems • The human virtues that Kipling is most concerned with - courage, duty, honor, decency, commitment and grit - he is quick to recognize in men and women from all classes and races.
Critics • Critics concur that Kipling's early success stemmed, in part, from his ability to inspire deep emotions in his audiences • The imperialist views Kipling expressed in his Indian stories also contributed to his initial success; however, later in his career after political tides in England had shifted, his stories were considered outdated and his popularity waned