Life's Handicap, Being Stories of Mine Own People

Life's Handicap, Being Stories of Mine Own People

by Rudyard Kipling
Life's Handicap, Being Stories of Mine Own People

Life's Handicap, Being Stories of Mine Own People

by Rudyard Kipling

Hardcover

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Overview

Reproduction of the original: Life's Handicap, Being Stories of Mine Own People by Rudyard Kipling

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783752355970
Publisher: Outlook Verlag
Publication date: 07/30/2020
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.69(d)

About the Author

Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936) was one of the most popular writers in the United Kingdom in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. His fiction works include The Jungle Book — a classic of children’s literature — and the rousing adventure novel Kim, as well as books of poems, short stories, and essays. In 1907, at the age of 42, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Read an Excerpt


THE MAN WHO WAS The Earth gave up her dead that tide, Into our camp he came, And said his say, and went his way, And left our hearts aflame. Keep tally on the gun-butt score The vengeance we must take, When God shall bring lull reckoning, For our dead comrade's sake. Ballad. Let it be clearly understood that the Russian is a delightful person till he tucks in his shirt. As an Oriental he is charming. It is only when he insists upon being treated as the most easterly of western peoples instead of the most westerly of easterns that he becomes a racial anomaly extremely difficult to handle. The host never knows which side of his nature is going to turn up next. Dirkovitch was a Russian a Russian of the Russians who appeared to get/ his bread by serving the Czar as an officer in a Cossack regiment, and corresponding for a Russian newspaper with a name that was never twice alike. He was a handsome young Oriental, fond of wandering through unexplored portions of the earth, and he arrived in India from nowhere in particular. At least no living man could ascertain whether it was by way of Balkh, Badakshan, Chitral, Baluchistan, or Nepaul, oranywhere else. The Indian Government, being in an unusually affable mood, gave orders that he was to be civilly treated and shown everything that was to be seen. So he drifted, talking bad English and worse French, from one city to another, till he foregathered with Her Majesty's White Hussars in the city of Peshawur, which stands at the mouth of that narrow swordcut in the hills that men call the Khyber Pass. He was undoubtedly an officer, and he was decorated after the manner of the Kussians with little enamelled crosses, and he could talk, and(though this has nothing to do with his merits) he had been given up as a hopel...

Table of Contents

The Lang Men o' Larut1
Reingelder and the German Flag6
The Wandering Jew10
Through the Fire15
The Finances of the Gods21
The Amir's Homily27
Jews in Shushan32
The Limitations of Pambe Serang37
Little Tobrah43
Bubbling Well Road47
The City of Dreadful Night52
Georgie Porgie60
Naboth71
The Dream of Duncan Parrenness76
The Incarnation of Krishna Mulvaney83
The Courting of Dinah Shadd115
On Greenhow Hill144
The Man Who Was166
The Head of the District184
Without Benefit of Clergy212
At the End of the Passage241
The Mutiny of the Mavericks267
The Mark of the Beast290
The Return of Imray307
Namgay Doola322
Bertran and Bimi336
Moti Guj--Mutineer343
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