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Muldoon" (notes edited by John McGivering) |
notes on the text |
As they grew in Kipling’s achievement, each of his ‘soldiers three’ emerged as a basically tragic character. with Mulvaney … the most fully created.Cornell takes a realistic view (page 158):
Mulvaney is not always a loveable rogue but at times a thief, and even, as “The Solid Muldoon” shows, a fairly cold-blooded adulterer. (See Gilmour (page 47) for an interesting examination of Kipling’s understanding of soldiers and how he wrote of them in a way that none had done since Shakespeare as Carrington and Laski have also observed. elsewhere