Rudyard Joseph Kipling was born in Bombay in 1865. His father, John
Lockwood Kipling, was the author and illustrator of Beast and Man
in India and his mother, Alice, was the sister of Lady Burne-Jones.
In 1871 Kipling was brought home from India and spent five unhappy
years with a foster family in Southsea, an experience he later drew
on in The Light That Failed (1890). The years he spent at the
United Services College, a school for officers' children, are
depicted in Stalky and Co. (1899) and the character of Beetle is
something of a self-portrait. It was during his time at the college
that he began writing poetry and Schoolboy Lyrics was published
privately in 1881.
In the following year he started work as a journalist in India, and
while there, produced a body of work, stories, sketches and poems -
notably Plain Tales from the Hills (1888) - which made him an
instant literary celebrity when he returned to England in 1889.
Barrack Room Ballads (1892) contains some of his most popular
pieces, including 'Mandalay', 'Gunga Din' and 'Danny Deever'. In
this collection Kipling experimented with form and dialect, notably
the cockney accent of the soldier poems, but the influence of
hymns, music-hall songs, ballads and public poetry can be found
throughout his verse.
In 1892 he married an American, Caroline Balestier, and from 1892
to 1896 they lived in Vermont, where Kipling wrote The Jungle Book,
published in 1894. In 1901 came Kim and in 1902 the Just So
Stories. Tales of every kind - including historical and science
fiction - continued to flow from his pen, but Kim is generally
thought to be his greatest long work, putting him high among the
chroniclers of British expansion.
From 1902 Kipling made his home in Sussex, but he continued to
travel widely and caught his first glimpse of warfare in South
Africa, where he wrote some excellent reportage on the Boer War.
However, many of the views he expressed were rejected by
anti-imperialists who accused him of jingoism and love of violence.
Though rich and successful, he never again enjoyed the literary
esteem of his early years.
With the onset of the Great War, his work became a great deal more
sombre. The stories he subsequently wrote, A Diversity of Creatures
(1917), Debits and Credits (1926) and Limits and Renewals (1932)
are now thought by many to contain some of his finest writing. The
death of his only son in 1915 also contributed to a new inwardness
of vision. Kipling refused to accept the role of Poet Laureate and
other civil honours, but he was the first English writer to be
awarded the Nobel Prize, in 1907. He died in 1936 and his
autobiographical fragment Something of Myself was published the
following year.
Nobel Prize for Literature
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