A Kipling Primer1899 - 219 páginas |
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Página 7
... never before witnessed the spectacle of a collected edition of an author's works issued within a dozen years of the date on his earliest title - page . A body of criti- cism is bound to grow up around the writings of a genius so ...
... never before witnessed the spectacle of a collected edition of an author's works issued within a dozen years of the date on his earliest title - page . A body of criti- cism is bound to grow up around the writings of a genius so ...
Página 16
... never an " easy boy to manage , " yet no amount of repressive and ill - advised methods of discipline sufficed to take from him his healthy outlook on life or enjoyment of its pleasures . Perhaps it was well , however , that he was not ...
... never an " easy boy to manage , " yet no amount of repressive and ill - advised methods of discipline sufficed to take from him his healthy outlook on life or enjoyment of its pleasures . Perhaps it was well , however , that he was not ...
Página 27
... of good will throughout the world who have put me under a debt I can never hope to repay . Faithfully yours , RUDYARD KIPLING . In the latter part of June Mr. Kipling and his Biographical Sketch 27 Restoration to Health.
... of good will throughout the world who have put me under a debt I can never hope to repay . Faithfully yours , RUDYARD KIPLING . In the latter part of June Mr. Kipling and his Biographical Sketch 27 Restoration to Health.
Página 33
... never yet been , and never will be , won except by a union of qualities deserving to be called great . What gives Mr. Kipling's work the character of greatness ? 4 . WHY KIPLING MAY BE CALLED GREAT . Mr. Kipling's work may properly be ...
... never yet been , and never will be , won except by a union of qualities deserving to be called great . What gives Mr. Kipling's work the character of greatness ? 4 . WHY KIPLING MAY BE CALLED GREAT . Mr. Kipling's work may properly be ...
Página 35
... never tri- umphs permanently over virtue , and it bears its proper punishment . True , Mr. Kipling loves to show us that the sinner has something of the saint about him , and the saint is not all saint ; but he never confuses moral ...
... never tri- umphs permanently over virtue , and it bears its proper punishment . True , Mr. Kipling loves to show us that the sinner has something of the saint about him , and the saint is not all saint ; but he never confuses moral ...
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Academy Adams in Fortnightly army Athenæum Balestier Barrack-Room Ballads Black and White Blackwoods British soldier Captains Courageous character clever Critic Day's death Deodars Departmental Ditties Dick Dinah Shadd Edinburgh Review Edmund Gosse elephant England English escape finally finest Francis Adams Gadsby girl gives Gosse Gunga Gunga Din Hauksbee human humor husband India Inventions Kipling's L'ENVOI Lahore latter Learoyd Life's Handicap Light that Failed Lionel Johnson literary literature lived London lyric Magazine man's master masterpiece McClure's Military Gazette Mowgli Mulvaney native Naulahka never night officer Ortheris Outward Bound edition Phantom Rickshaw Plain plot poet poetry prose reader regiment rescue returned Rudyard Kipling Sahib satire Saturday Review Sea to Sea Second Jungle Book Seven Seas Simla sketch Soldiers Three song Spectator spirit Stalky stanzas style tale things tion Toomai verse Wee Willie Winkie wife woman words writes York young