Rudyard Kipling

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Rudyard Kipling’

19
Six Honest Serving-Men Rudyard Kipling

A professional journalist and author recognises that he has met his match

Bombay-born Rudyard Kipling’s first job was as a journalist in what was then the Indian city of Lahore. Kipling grasped the importance of sending his ‘honest serving-men’ out on duty in the search for accurate reports, but even the most investigative of journalists has to recognise that in certain company, he is a mere amateur.

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20
‘Sussex’ Rudyard Kipling

A meditation on our instinctive love for the place in which we live.

This is just part of a rather longer poem in which Kipling explores the fundamental truth that no mere human can really love everyone and everything equally. That, he says, is why it is both necessary and right that we feel particularly bound to, and responsible for, the place we call home.

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21
Kipling and ‘Agamemnon’ Clay Lane

Both Rudyard Kipling and the Royal Navy saw Greek sovereignty as a universal symbol of freedom.

In 1821, the Greeks declared independence from the Ottoman Empire, setting off a bloody revolution that ended in victory for the Greeks. A century later, as the Ottoman Turks shared defeat with Germany in the Great War, Kipling and the Royal Navy rubbed a little salt in wounds old and new.

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22
‘If...’ Rudyard Kipling

Rudyard Kipling’s much-loved verses are a reflection on what it is that builds real character.

First published in Rewards and Fairies (1910), the verses below followed a story about George Washington’s principles of leadership, though Kipling tells us that the initial inspiration for the poem had been his friend Storr Jameson, Prime Minister of the Cape Colony in 1904-8. ‘If...’ quickly became, as it has remained ever since, one of the nation’s favourites.

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23
‘Hail, Liberty!’ Rudyard Kipling

Kipling borrowed from the Greek Independence movement to give thanks for the end of the Great War.

Kipling’s poem, published at the end of the Great War in the ‘Daily Telegraph’ on October 17, 1918, is a verse-paraphrase of the Greek National Anthem. The original was composed by Dionýsios Solomós in 1823, and ran to 158 verses.

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24
The Cat Who Walks by Himself Clay Lane

The sly cat hatches a plan to get all the benefits of domestic life without any of the responsibilities.

In this short tale by Rudyard Kipling, we learn how the Cat tried to get all the comforts of domestic life without doing any work in return.

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