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(notes edited by John McGivering) |
notes on the text |
Kipling’s vitality and curiosity, his strong physical sensitiveness, his life-long taste for marked contrast and ironical pattern, produced a multitude of scenes and figures which provide a parallel to the medieval Dance of Death. ('Death' as a dancing skeleton, leading men to the grave: Ed.)In her chapter 8, 'Change and Persistence' (p. 233), writing of a number of the early tales, she observes:
Here is the Other Man, come back to Simla to visit the woman he loved...
Poor bullied Mrs Schreiderling in 'The Other Man' is seen 'kneeling in the wet road by he back seat of the newly-arrived tonga, screaming hideously'. There is a strong note of violence and abandonment in these drastic scenes and anecdotes, however curtly they are told. The Narrator, for all his knowledgeableness, is sometimes appalled.. It is in this region of grotesque and tragic illusion and grotesque and tragic reality that we find what is permanent in Kipling, not in his precocious and cleverish dealings with Simla flirtations. …Hart (p. 27) compares this tale to the work of Guy de Maupassant (1850-1893), another fine exponent of the short story:
For both authors ... love is a kind of disease, a source of evil, of bitter unhappiness, an object of cynical or ironical comment. Bobby Wick’s advisers warn him against it; it puts an end, at best, to a promising career – to Gadsby’s for example in the army and Strickland in the police.
[Wick appears in “Only a Subaltern” Strickland in "Miss Youghal’s Syce" and a number of other tales, and Gadsby in "The Story of the Gadsbys”. See also the accompanying verse “The Winners”: “He travels the fastest who travels alone”. Ed.]