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Rudyard and Kipling
Later important examples of the poetic form included Rudyard Kipling s ‘ Barrack Room Ballads ( 1892-6 ) and Oscar Wilde s ‘ Ballad of Reading Gaol ( 1897 ).
* 1865 – Rudyard Kipling, English writer, Nobel laureate ( d. 1936 )
An early example of espionage literature is Kim by the English novelist Rudyard Kipling, with a description of the training of an intelligence agent in the Great Game between the UK and Russia in 19th century Central Asia.
He was both an admirer and a critic of Rudyard Kipling, praising Kipling as a gifted writer and a " good bad poet " whose work is " spurious " and " morally insensitive and aesthetically disgusting ," but undeniably seductive and able to speak to certain aspects of reality more effectively than more enlightened authors.
MacGregor Mathers, Masonic ritual, and Rudyard Kipling.
Rudyard Kipling, who wrote a history of the Irish Guards, in which his own son fought and was killed, noted that, " it is undeniable that Colonel Alexander had the gift of handling the men on the lines to which they most readily responded ... His subordinates loved him, even when he fell upon them blisteringly for their shortcomings ; and his men were all his own.
# REDIRECT Rudyard Kipling
* Rudyard Kipling
Rudyard Kipling devotes several chapters to the Picts in his book Puck of Pook's Hill.
* Rudyard Kipling s Verse: Definitive edition.
* Early verse by Rudyard Kipling, 1879-1889: unpublished, uncollected, and rarely collected poems, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986.
* Works by Rudyard Kipling, HTML online.
Kim ( 1901 ) by Rudyard Kipling concerns the Anglo – Russian Great Game of imperial and geopolitical rivalry and strategic warfare for supremacy in Central Asia, usually in Afghanistan.
Rudyard Kipling published short story collections for grown-ups, e. g. Plain Tales from the Hills ( 1888 ), as well as for children, e. g. The Jungle Book ( 1894 ).
* Rudyard Kipling: A Smuggler's Song ( 1906 ) – this poem appears in "' Hal o ' the Draft ", one of the stories in Puck of Pook's Hill
The tiger continues to be a subject in literature ; both Rudyard Kipling, in The Jungle Book, and William Blake, in Songs of Experience, depict the tiger as a menacing and fearful animal.
Gertrude Hartley tried to instill in her daughter an appreciation of literature and introduced her to the works of Hans Christian Andersen, Lewis Carroll and Rudyard Kipling, as well as stories of Greek mythology and Indian folklore.
* December 30 – Rudyard Kipling, British writer, Nobel Prize laureate ( d. 1936 )
* Literature – Rudyard Kipling
* January 18 – Rudyard Kipling, British writer, Nobel Prize laureate ( b. 1865 )
* October – Rudyard Kipling publishes the story Mowgli Leaves the Jungle Forever in The Cosmopolitan illustrated magazine ( price 10 cents ).
* Rudyard Kipling published Barrack-Room Ballads in 1892.
* Rudyard Kipling published The Jungle Book in 1894.

Rudyard and
The English poet John Masefield, following in the footsteps of peers like Rudyard Kipling, seized upon shanties as a nostalgic literary device, and included them along with much older, non-shanty sea songs in his 1906 collection A Sailor s Garland.
Rudyard Kipling romanticized the idea of the sailor s sea song within the poetic genre with his works “ The First Chantey ” and “ The Last Chantey ” ( 1893 ).
The company s first success at publishing came in 1892 with the publication of Rudyard Kipling's Barrack-Room Ballads.
The Phantom was inspired by Falk s fascination for myths and legends, such as the ones about El Cid, King Arthur, Nordic and Greek folklore heroes and popular fictional characters like " Tarzan " and " Mowgli " from Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book.
The importance of the Irish in the British Army was summed up by Rudyard Kipling, who lost his son, Lt John Kipling of the Irish Guards, in World War I ,“ For where there are Irish there s bound to be fighting,

Rudyard and s
The Beja have been named " Blemmyes " in Roman times, " Buga " s in Aksumite inscriptions in Ge ' ez, and " Fuzzy Wuzzy " by Rudyard Kipling.

Rudyard and Verse
* Complete Verse by Rudyard Kipling 1990

Rudyard and edition
" left-facing " swastika from a 1911 edition of Rudyard Kipling | Kipling's Puck of Pook's Hill

Rudyard and 1940
* Rudyard Kipling-A Study in Literature and Political Ideas ( 1940 )

Kipling and
Kipling employs the term in " At the Pit s Mouth ," for an adulterer: " Once upon a time there was a Man and his Wife and a Tertium Quid.
Destroyers HMS Jackal, Kashmir, Kipling, Kelly, Kelvin and Jersey were a part of Mountbatten s fleet.
More ecstatic reviewers echo critic Milton Bronner s favorable comparison: “ Not since the days when Kipling burst upon the English word has any writer displayed more sheer power and driving force ”.

and s
The AMPAS was originally conceived by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio boss Louis B. Mayer as a professional honorary organization to help improve the film industry s image and help mediate labor disputes.
The International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences defines psychological altruism as " a motivational state with the goal of increasing another s welfare ".
Psychological altruism is contrasted with psychological egoism, which refers to the motivation to increase one s own welfare.
One way is a sincere expression of Christian love, " motivated by a powerful feeling of security, strength, and inner salvation, of the invincible fullness of one s own life and existence ".
Another way is merely " one of the many modern substitutes for love, ... nothing but the urge to turn away from oneself and to lose oneself in other people s business.
* David Firestone-When Romney s Reach Exceeds His Grasp-Mitt Romney quotes the song
" Swift extends the metaphor to get in a few jibes at England s mistreatment of Ireland, noting that " For this kind of commodity will not bear exportation, and flesh being of too tender a consistence, to admit a long continuance in salt, although perhaps I could name a country, which would be glad to eat up our whole nation without it.
George Wittkowsky argued that Swift s main target in A Modest Proposal was not the conditions in Ireland, but rather the can-do spirit of the times that led people to devise a number of illogical schemes that would purportedly solve social and economic ills.
In response, Swift s Modest Proposal was " a burlesque of projects concerning the poor ", that were in vogue during the early 18th century.
Critics differ about Swift s intentions in using this faux-mathematical philosophy.
Charles K. Smith argues that Swift s rhetorical style persuades the reader to detest the speaker and pity the Irish.
Swift s specific strategy is twofold, using a " trap " to create sympathy for the Irish and a dislike of the narrator who, in the span of one sentence, " details vividly and with rhetorical emphasis the grinding poverty " but feels emotion solely for members of his own class.
Swift s use of gripping details of poverty and his narrator s cool approach towards them create " two opposing points of view " that " alienate the reader, perhaps unconsciously, from a narrator who can view with ' melancholy ' detachment a subject that Swift has directed us, rhetorically, to see in a much less detached way.
Once the children have been commodified, Swift s rhetoric can easily turn " people into animals, then meat, and from meat, logically, into tonnage worth a price per pound ".
Swift uses the proposer s serious tone to highlight the absurdity of his proposal.
In making his argument, the speaker uses the conventional, text book approved order of argument from Swift s time ( which was derived from the Latin rhetorician Quintilian ).
James Johnson argued that A Modest Proposal was largely influenced and inspired by Tertullian s Apology: a satirical attack against early Roman persecution of Christianity.
Johnson notes Swift s obvious affinity for Tertullian and the bold stylistic and structural similarities between the works A Modest Proposal and Apology.
He reminds readers that " there is a gap between the narrator s meaning and the text s, and that a moral-political argument is being carried out by means of parody ".

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