Publication The story was published in the Civil and Military Gazette on November 23 1886, in the first Indian edition of Plain Tales from the Hills in 1888, and in subsequent editions of that collection. The Story Lieutenant Golightly is a vain man. He prides himself above all as looking like 'an officer and a gentleman'. At the end of his leave in the Hills he sets out on horseback in a new khaki suit of a delicate olive green, a peacock blue tie, and snowy white collar and helmet, though with no money in his wallet. Unfortunately it rains heavily, destroying his helmet, covering him with dye, and making him look like a tramp. At Pathankote, moneyless, he tries to negotiate for a first class rail ticket, is taken for a deserter, seized forcibly by the station staff, and taken under guard to Umritsar. There he is arrested by the military, who refuse to believe he is an officer. Luckily a fellow officer emerges from a train, recognises Golightly, and rescues him; but too late to save his dignity. Some Critical Comments Elliot L. Gilbert in the Kipling Journal of June 1965 (154/11) comments that: ...there is never really as much disparity between an author's early efforts and his late works as may appear on the surface, and indeed, what is so striking about many of Kipling's first stories is the way in which they mark him out as a serious artist, one quite capable of growing into the author of the mature tales... "The Arrest of Lieutenant Golightly" (is an) intriguing analysis of ‘a slight anecdote’ which turns out to be far richer and more meaningfully composed than might have been guessed from a cursory reading.Like so much of Kipling’s work, this is a deceptive and complex story: Golightly stresses the point that he is an officer and a gentleman (albeit with a curious taste in ‘plain clothes’) and then goes on to show that while he is an officer, he is certainly no gentleman – a fact that the commentators I have seen have missed. The N.C.O and private soldiers of the escort, usually pretty good judges, immediately accept him as one of themselves, even admiring his prowess at cursing 'You an orficer ! It’s the likes o’ you brings disgrace on the likes o’ us'. This may perhaps be seen as the male equivalent of the woman that married Hatt in "In the Pride of his Youth" later in this volume – 'so nearly of his own caste…'. Golightly had the money, and a veneer of gentility, that enabled him to get a commission in the army, but seems to have reverted to type when in a tight spot.[Ed.]. . |