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Kipling and had
At that moment Kipling was overwhelmed with awed amazement, suddenly recalling that these identical details of scene, action and word had occurred to him in a dream six weeks earlier.
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.
Valiente also noticed that a chant in one ritual in the book was based upon the poem " A Tree Song " from Puck of Pook's Hill by Rudyard Kipling, which she had enjoyed as a child.
The Charge of the Light Brigade by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, with its galloping hoofbeat rhythm, is a prime late Victorian example of this, though Rudyard Kipling had written a scathing reply, The Last of the Light Brigade, criticising the poverty in which many Light Brigade veterans found themselves in old age.
This use of the book's universe was approved by Kipling after a direct petition of Robert Baden-Powell, founder of the Scouting movement, who had originally asked for the author's permission for the use of the Memory Game from Kim in his scheme to develop the morale and fitness of working-class youths in cities.
Rudyard Kipling had previously called it the eighth Wonder of the World.
Kipling implored those who had lost their sons in the Great War to consider giving a donation so that their names would live on.
In 1888, a farm south of the Lake Shore Road and east of Mimico Avenue ( Kipling Avenue ) which had been purchased by the Ontario Government, was used to create the Mimico Lunatic Asylum ( alleviating overcrowding at Toronto's Asylum on Queen Street West-now the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health ).
Baldwin had idolised Kipling in his youth and had been a favourite of the Kipling family.
Whilst the story was known to exist in the volume, it had never been transcribed, or widely discussed ; the school eventually decided to publish it in association with the Kipling Society, and it was published to the world in 2004.
His 1912 work in two volumes concentrates on art before 1800 but offers Hokusai's prints as a window of beauty after Japanese art had become too modern for Fenollosa's taste: " Hokusai is a great designer, as Kipling and Whitman are great poets.
In reality, Kipling had captured a real insight into the attitudes of the ordinary soldiers, such as their contempt for those who sent them off to fight and die:
When composing the musical settings for Kipling's poetry, Bellamy had a theory, shared with many others, that highly metrical poets like Kipling used song tunes to keep their poems flowing properly.
This observation suggested the tune for the Kipling poem and made him wonder whether Kipling had actually composed to that tune, it being a common folk song in the 19th century and certainly part of the repertoire of the remarkable Copper family of Sussex who had lived in Rottingdean when Kipling was also living there.
Initially, Bellamy's proposal to record the Ballads was vetoed by Kipling's daughter, and he had to wait until her death in 1976 before permission was finally granted by the Kipling Society.
The book was first published under this title in 1933, although its contents are virtually identical to The Works of Rudyard Kipling Volume VII: The Jungle Book, part of a multi-volume set which had appeared in 1907.

Kipling and already
The invention of the concept It is generally attributed to Elinor Glyn, but already in 1904, R. Kipling, in the short story " Mrs. Bathurst " introduced It.

Kipling and used
Victorian writer Rudyard Kipling used it in ' How the Leopard Got His Spots ' and ' A Counting-Out Song ' to illustrate the usage of the day.
The Reading Room was used by a large number of famous figures, including notably Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Karl Marx, Oscar Wilde, Friedrich Hayek, Bram Stoker, Mahatma Gandhi, Rudyard Kipling, George Orwell, George Bernard Shaw, Mark Twain, Lenin, Norbert Elias, Virginia Woolf, Arthur Rimbaud and H. G. Wells.
As at virtually all boys ' schools of its era, corporal punishment ( strokes of the cane ) was used, but USC was very unusual in that the cane was applied to the student's upper back ( as described by Kipling ) rather than the buttocks.
The term " The Law of the Jungle " is also used in a similar context, drawn from Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book ( 1894 )-though in the society of jungle animals portrayed in that book and obviously meant as a metaphor for human society, that phrase referred to an intricate code of laws which Kipling describes in detail, and not at all to a lawless chaos.
Robert Armitage Sterndale, from whom Kipling derived most of his knowledge of Indian fauna, used the Hindi word " Bhalu " for several bear species, though Daniel Karlin, who edited the Penguin reissue of The Jungle Book in 1989, states that, with the exception of colour, Kipling's descriptions of Baloo are consistent with the sloth bear, as brown bears and Asian black bears do not occur in the Seoni area where the novel takes place.
Rudyard Kipling used the rhyme as the title of his 1888 short story.
Kipling used the house's setting and the wider local area as the setting for many of his stories in Puck of Pook's Hill ( 1906 ) and the sequel Rewards and Fairies ( 1910 ), and there is a Kipling room at " The Bear " public house, one of two pubs located along Burwash High Street.
In the early 2000s, the Mr Kipling brand was moved away from its familiar design, and for about a year a modern logo, consisting of a red oval with " Mr Kipling " in a script font inside the oval, was used.
Around 2005, the manufacturers briefly experimented with another new logo and a striking pack design: pack-fronts simply consisting of the words " Mr Kipling ", the name of the cake, and the phrase " Exceedingly good cakes " in a more formal, classic typeface ; the only image of the cake on each pack-front was a close-up of one part of it, used as a background image for the entire pack.
Rudyard Kipling ( 1865 – 1936 ) used this concept as a central metaphor in his short story " The Strange Ride of Morrowbie Jukes " ( 1885 ).
Rudyard Kipling used the Wainganga ( also spelled Wangunga in older editions ) as a major landmark in the Mowgli stories of The Jungle Book and The Second Jungle Book ( 1894 – 1895 ).
Beginning with The Burglar Who Liked to Quote Kipling, Bernie has become the owner / operator of Barnegat Books, a used bookstore in Greenwich Village that he purchased from its retiring owner and partially funds through the take from his occasional burglary activities.
McGill's Kipling joke is used in a 1962 episode of The Beverly Hillbillies, " Pygmalion and Elly ", in a scene with Elly May Clampett ( Donna Douglas ) and Sonny Drysdale ( Louis Nye ).

Kipling and same
Later in that same novel, Lermer is trying to identify a quote (" I have lived and worked with men ") and guesses that it was written by Rhysling or Kipling.
In 1975, it was adapted by director John Huston into a feature film of the same name, starring Sean Connery and Michael Caine as the heroes and Christopher Plummer as Kipling.
** Danny Deaver from poem with the same title by Rudyard Kipling
* " If -" – the Rudyard Kipling poem on the same theme of advice for a good life.
* In 2007, during the 40th-anniversary DVD rerelease of The Jungle Book London press junket, the Sherman Brothers were witnessed by press working on a new song for Inkas ( see below ) in the same Brown's Hotel room where The Jungle Book was originally penned by British writer Rudyard Kipling over a hundred years earlier.
* It features heavily in the soundtrack of the film The Man Who Would Be King a 1975 film adapted from the Rudyard Kipling short story of the same title with masonic themes but the lyrics are those of Reginald Heber's " The Son of God Goes Forth to War " from the Lutheran Songbook ..
In the same year he joined the Savile Club, known for its artistic and especially literary members, who have included Hardy, Kipling, and Yeats.
Around the same time, the write-ups on the back of their packaging once again purported to be written by the person of Mr Kipling.
The quotation above the players ' entrance to Centre Court is an extract from the poem " If ", by Rudyard Kipling, which reads: " If you can meet with triumph and disaster and treat those two impostors just the same.
This femme fatale inspired a poem of the same name ( also 1897 ) by Rudyard Kipling.

Kipling and title
* An early Rudyard Kipling story has the title The Phantom Rickshaw ( 1885 ).
In literature, " The Maltese Cat " is the title of a short story by Rudyard Kipling.
" Eliot said " The Love Song of " portion of the title came from " The Love Song of Har Dyal ," a poem by Rudyard Kipling, published in the 1888 collection Plain Tales from the Hills.
Rudyard Kipling published a series of articles about the British Channel Fleet under the title A Fleet in Being in 1898, but did not use the term in the sense described here.
" Baa Baa, Black Sheep " is the title of an autobiographical short story by Rudyard Kipling, published in 1888.
The title was re-used as the title of short stories by Rudyard Kipling and O. Henry.
The title is a reference to the 1911 Rudyard Kipling poem " The Female of the Species ," which includes the line, " The female of the species must be deadlier than the male ", and also refers to Sapper's earlier Drummond book The Female of the Species.
The title is taken from the Rudyard Kipling poem ; The Ballad of East and West.

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