Kipling penetrates far enough into the personality and individuality of these characters to show that Tommy, derided at home when times were peaceful, [as described in the verses of the same name] was not only human, but was, too, an individual with a capacity for spiritual affection and self-appraisal, and the possessor of an unsuspected sensitivity which Kiplings predecessors had denied him ... Kipling ... set a new style in military story-telling.Seymour-Smith(page 92) dislikes the accents but does see some merit:
In his use of dialect then, he fails ... he is not Shakespearean in that, and he was clearly trying to be. But there really is a touch of Shakespeare in these fictions of soldierly companionship.Norman Page(page 137) records:
An enthusiastic reviewer in Blackwoods compared the description of fighting to Homer or Sir Walter [Scott] [It might be the latters novel Ivanhoe that the reviewer had in mind; Ed.]
notes on the text
[February 16th 2005] Publication First published in The Weeks News of Allahabad on August 4th 1888, issued in Soldiers Three (Indian Railway Library No. 1) the same year, and collected in Soldiers Three and other Stories in 1899. The Story It is a stifling June night in Fort Amara at Lahore, and the men are doing all they can to fight off heat exhaustion or worse. Mulvaney gets them through the terrible hours until dawn by telling a tale of a bloody fight by the Black Tyrone and the 'Ould Regiment' against an army of Pathans on the Frontier. But he asks the narrator at the end "...can thim that helps others help thimselves ?" , a question that Kipling, the great teller of tales, must have sometimes asked himself. Some critical comments See |