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in his Life (notes edited by John McGivering and John Radcliffe, drawing on the work of Roger Lancelyn Green for the ORG. We have been grateful for critical comments and suggestions from Peter Havholm ) |
the story notes on the text |
There is a certain darkness into which the soul of the young man sometimes descends - a horror of desolation, abandonment, and realised worthlessness … I know of what I speak.Some critical comments
[McGill College, October 17 1907]
There are deeper and darker caverns which he penetrated, whether through experience or through imagination does not matter: there are hints in “The End of the Passage" and later in “The Woman in His Life” and “In the Same Boat”: oddly enough, these stories are foreshadowed by an early poem which I have not included, “La Nuit Blanche”, which reappears in “At the End of the Passage”. Kipling knew something of the things which are underneath, and of the things which are beyond the frontier.Dr Tompkins considers this story in her Chapter 6, 'Healing', calling it 'a happy tale', and commenting (page 177):
The narrative here is forthright and in the third person, and we need no more comment than we get from his knowledgeable ex-batman who steers him back to sanity by means of the jet-black dwarf Aberdeen bitch Dinah …This, too, is a healing through love.Angus Wilson (p.313) writes:
Of the many tales of the healing of war’s mental wounds, most of them diffuse and over-elaborate, the most simply satisfactory is probably “The Woman in His Life”. In this story, a typical Kipling hero, a young veteran of the battle of Messines who, through engineering, builds up a thriving post-war industry, collapses from overwork and singleness of satisfaction. The wily Cockney valet ... saves his master from complete breakdown by persuading him to keep an Aberdeen terrier bitch. At this point all who are allergic to dog worship will leave. I like dogs well enough, but I am not a devotee: however I love cats enough to understand what Kipling is saying.Wilson (p. 314) goes on to deplore the sentimentality with which Kipling covers his conviction that the magnificence of dogs lies in their complete subservience to their masters:
It is hard to take as a whole; but it is an interesting example of how Kipling’s skill can reconcile an open-minded reader to the most unpromising themes.Andrew Lycett (p. 534) remarks of this and later stories about dogs:
Rudyard was making at least some comment on his marriage in his willingness, however jokingly, to compare a dog’s love with that of a woman.See also John Coates (p. 90) where he discusses the themes of redemption, comradeship, and mental collapse averted, in three stories in this collection: “The Woman in his Life”, “The Miracle of St. Jubanus” and “The Tender Achilles”.