Publication history Apparently written during the surge of work which began in the latter part of 1902 and culminated in the 1903 publication of The Five Nations. It appeared in The Times, February 27, 1903; New York Tribune, March 6 1903; Collier’s Weekly, March 7 1903; also published separately 1903. Collected in The Five Nations, I.V. 1919, and D.V 1940, and in the Sussex Edition vol. 33 and the Burwash Edition, vol.26. For readers of the Sussex Edition Kipling added a bracketed explanation to the title (South African War ended, May 1902) Background When it was first published in The Times of February 27, “The Settler? was headed by an extract from the speech given at Cape Town three days earlier by Joseph Chamberlain, at the banquet held there in his honour. As Colonial Secretary Chamberlain had been primarily responsible for British policy during the Anglo-Boer War. On his return to London a second banquet was held on March 20, after which the poem was reprinted separately. The poem enshrines hopes that Kipling shared with others, hopes for the peaceful development of the fertile lands of South Africa, to be carried out in partnership between men from both sides. In the last years of his life Cecil Rhodes had already begun to establish fruit-farming as an industry in the Cape. Intensive methods of farming had been foreign to the Boers: for religious reasons, the Boer legislature had forborne to extract maximum value from the land. (by Mary Hamer drawing on various sources, in particular Ralph Durand, “A Handbook to the Poetry of Rudyard Kipling" 1914.) |