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Kipling   /kˈɪplɪŋ/   Listen
proper noun
Kipling  n.  Rudyard Kipling, English author (1865-1936). He was born at Bombay, India in 1865, the son of John Lockwood Kipling, who was formerly head of the Lahore School of Industrial Art. He was educated in England and returned to India in 1880 as editor of the "Lahore Civil and Military Gazette." He returned to England about 1889, and lived several years in the United States. While in India he published stories, sketches, and poems descriptive of India and Anglo-Indian military and civil life: " Departmental Ditties, etc.", "Plain Tales from the Hills", "Mine Own People", "Soldiers Three", "Barrack-room Ballads, etc.", and others. After leaving India he published "The Light That Failed," "Naulahka" (with Balestier), "Many Inventions," "The Jungle Book," "The Second Jungle Book," "The Seven Seas," "Captains Courageous," "The White Man's Burden," "Kim," "The Man Who Would Be King and Other Stories," and others.
Synonyms: Rudyard Kipling.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Kipling" Quotes from Famous Books



... recognized. Victor Hugo illustrated the discovery in his Jean Valjean, it was a staple with Dickens, Bret Harte's heroes are all of that type, it was the inspiration of much of Charles Reade's eloquence, Kipling has more than a touch of it, our contemporary fiction-mongers sentimentalize over it, and the train-robber in the movies usually has a full line of sterling virtues up his sleeve. The lost soul, in short, brims over, ...
— The Subterranean Brotherhood • Julian Hawthorne

... called the Byron of Australia. But he played far more parts than Byron, and crowded more genuine romance into his tragic life than even the sixth Baron of Rochdale. In "The Sick Stock Rider" he reproduces the colonial bush as keenly as Kipling reproduces India. His "How we Beat the Favourite" is the finest ballad of the turf in the language. He is, above everything, the sportsman's poet. This edition contains twelve stirring illustrations in colour by Captain G. D. Giles. 336 pages. Buckram, 5/- net. ...
— Law and Laughter • George Alexander Morton

... that Artsybashev has placed at the beginning of the novel is taken from Ecclesiastes vii. 29: "God hath made man upright: but they have sought out many inventions." This same text was used by Kipling as the title of one of his books, but used naturally in a quite different way. The Devil has here cited Scripture for his purpose. The hero of the novel is an absolutely sincere, frank, and courageous Advocatus Diabou. He is invariably calm and ...
— Essays on Russian Novelists • William Lyon Phelps

... operations for some time, passing up as far as Constantinople, actually shelling the city, sinking transports, and accomplishing other feats which have been graphically described in the stories of Rudyard Kipling. And again, if the mine-fields were placed in close proximity to their bases, it would be comparatively easy for German submersibles of the Lake type, possessing appliances to enable divers to pass outboard when the vessel is submerged, to go ...
— The Journal of Submarine Commander von Forstner • Georg-Guenther von Forstner

... her old E. P. Roe period and developed a great avidity for Kipling and Thomas Hardy, for Wordsworth and Stephen Phillips. To her surprise she found that Billy was more familiar with these writers than she. Kent ...
— Lydia of the Pines • Honore Willsie Morrow


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