EIGHT-AND-TWENTY Of these tales appeared originally in the Civil and Militars Gazette. I am indebted to the kindness of the Proprietors of that paper for permission to reprint them.The remaining tales are, more or less, new.
In this collection of short stories Kipling succeeds in shattering such misapprehensions about life in India during the British Raj. Drawing on his own experiences as a cub reporter, he is able to interpret the ways and beliefs as well as the work and pleasures of the Imperial administrators and the races they governed that were half a world away from his original Victorian readers.
Viceroys and beggars, soldiers and their officers, civil servants and children - and some very clever women - all play their parts in the history of a sub-continent. And although everywhere there are barriers between the races, the classes and the sexes, the inevitable misunderstandings between them as often end in comedy as in tragedy.
Lispeth
Three and---an Extra
Thrown Away
Miss Youghal's Sais
' Yoked with an Unbeliever'
False Dawn
The Rescue of Pluffles
Cupid's Arrows.
The Three Musketeers
His Chance in Life
Watches- of the Night
The Other Man
Consequences
The Conversion of Aurelian McGoggin
The Tsking of Lungtungpen
A Germ-Destroyer
Kidnapped
The Arrest of Lieutenant Golightly
In the House of 8uddhoo
His Wedded Wife
The Broken-link Handicap
Beyond the Pale
In Error
A Bank Fraud
Tods' Amendment
The Daughter of the Regiment
In the Pride of his Youth
Pig
The Rout of the White Hussars
The Bronckhorst Divorce-Case
Venus Annodomini
The Bisara of Poorce
A Friend's Friend
The Crate of the Hundred Sorrows
The Madness of Private Ortheris
The Story of Muhtmmad Din
On the Strength of a Likeness
Wressley of the Foreign Office
By Word of Mouth
To be Filed for Reference