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Plain Tales from the Hills
Plain Tales from the Hills
Plain Tales from the Hills
Ebook272 pages5 hours

Plain Tales from the Hills

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

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Classic Kipling short stories, including LESPETH, THREE AND AN EXTRA, THROWN AWAY, MISS YOUGHAL'S SAIS, YOKED WITH AN UNBELIEVER, FALSE DAWN, THE RESCUE OF PLUFFLES, CUPID'S ARROWS, HIS CHANCE IN LIFE, WATCHES OF THE NIGHT, THE OTHER MAN, CONSEQUENCES, THE CONVERSION OF AURELIAN MCGOGGIN, A GERM DESTROYER, KIDNAPPED, THE ARREST OF LIEUTENANT GOLIGHTLY, THE HOUSE OF SUDDHOO. HIS WEDDED WIFE, THE BROKEN LINK HANDICAPPED, BEYOND THE PALE,
IN ERROR, A BANK FRAUD, TOD'S AMENDMENT, IN THE PRIDE OF HIS YOUTH, PIG, THE ROUT OF THE WHITE HUSSARS, THE BRONCKHORST DIVORCE-CASE,VENUS ANNODOMINI, THE BISARA OF POORER, THE GATE OF A HUNDRED SORROWS,THE STORY OF MUHAMMID DIN, ON THE STRENGTH OF A LIKENESS, WRESSLEY OF THE FOREIGN OFFICE, BY WORD OF MOUTH, and TO BE HELD FOR REFERENCE.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherSeltzer Books
Release dateMar 1, 2018
ISBN9781455354009
Author

Rudyard Kipling

Rudyard Kipling was born in India in 1865. After intermittently moving between India and England during his early life, he settled in the latter in 1889, published his novel The Light That Failed in 1891 and married Caroline (Carrie) Balestier the following year. They returned to her home in Brattleboro, Vermont, where Kipling wrote both The Jungle Book and its sequel, as well as Captains Courageous. He continued to write prolifically and was the first Englishman to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1907 but his later years were darkened by the death of his son John at the Battle of Loos in 1915. He died in 1936.

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Rating: 3.6409092136363634 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Having published only three novels, viz. The Light that Failed (1891), Captains Courageous (1896) and Kim (1901), Rudyard Kipling is mostly remembered for his poetry and short stories. He won the Nobel Prize in 1907, but as his prose and poetry is most closely associated with British colonialism, his work is now but little read.Plain tales from the hills, a collection of 40 stories, is one of the first prose works of Kipling to be published. But for twelve, these stories had first appeared in a local newspaper in India. They are sketches of various aspects of life in British India.However, these stories and the sentiments they refer to stand very far off modern readers. Most of the stories come across as gossip, and would only seem interesting to an incrowd readership, either British colonials of the time in India or the home country. Among modern readers it is unlikely to find either staunch defenders of the Raj, or readers to whom the intricacies of life in Simla would be appealing enough to read.The stories appear dull, and as some stories are interrelated, with characters repeatedl appearing, it is not clear to modern readers what is going on. Besides, what appears to be going on, seems of very little interest to readers now.Plain tales from the hills is clearly dated to beyond shelf life, and best left alone.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    An enjoyable collection of some very random and sometimes hilarious stories with strong undercurrents of Victorian attitudes and prejudices.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Winding through this slow-moving book of thankfully short short boring and redundant storiesof the English experience with the natives of British India, I tried to find a favorite.The "object-letters" in "Beyond the Pale" were intriguing, then came the horror story ending.Instead, there was this:"A man should, whatever happens,keep to his own caste, race, and breed.Let the White go to the White, and the Black to the Black."Worse still, on pages 254 and 255, ever so casually appear the N-words.Geez, even from the expected taint of Mr. White Man's Burden, this was unexpected.The book is valuable only for the illustrations of Howard Mueller.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A collection of stories from Kipling written in the 1890s, all of which are set in the India of the Imperial Raj. They're of varying quality. The ones rendered in the argot of the soldiers can be quite difficult to parse, owing to the thickness of the accent, which lessens their effect. Others simply meander. But there are a half-dozen stories in the collection that are definite winners, including a hilarious sort-of ghost story involving a beloved horse of a regiment, and an affecting story of employee management where the truth is kept from a recalcitrant and critical employee. Might not be for everyone, this collection, especially given the odour in which Kipling is held by some.

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Plain Tales from the Hills - Rudyard Kipling

PLAIN TALES FROM THE HILLS BY RUDYARD KIPLING

published by Samizdat Express, Orange, CT, USA

established in 1974, offering over 14,000  books

Books by Rudyard Kipling available from us:

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American Notes

Departmental Ditties and Ballads

Captains Courageous

The Day's Work

A Diversity of Creatures

France at War

Indian Tales

The Jungle Book

Just So Stories

Kim

Letters of Travel

Life's Handicap, Being Stories of Mine Own People

The Light that Failed

The Man Who Would Be King

Plain Tales from the Hills

Puck of Pook's Hill

Rewards and Fairies

Sea Warfare

The Second Jungle Book

Soldiers Three

Songs from Books

Stalky and Company

The Story of the Gadsby

Traffics and Discoveries

Under the Deodars

Verses

The Years Between

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LESPETH

THREE AND AN EXTRA

THROWN AWAY

MISS YOUGHAL'S SAIS

YOKED WITH AN UNBELIEVER

FALSE DAWN

THE RESCUE OF PLUFFLES

CUPID'S ARROWS

HIS CHANCE IN LIFE

WATCHES OF THE NIGHT

THE OTHER MAN

CONSEQUENCES

THE CONVERSION OF AURELIAN MCGOGGIN

A GERM DESTROYER

KIDNAPPED

THE ARREST OF LIEUTENANT GOLIGHTLY

THE HOUSE OF SUDDHOO

HIS WEDDED WIFE

THE BROKEN LINK HANDICAPPED.

BEYOND THE PALE

IN ERROR

A BANK FRAUD

TOD'S AMENDMENT

IN THE PRIDE OF HIS YOUTH

PIG

THE ROUT OF THE WHITE HUSSARS

THE BRONCKHORST DIVORCE-CASE

VENUS ANNODOMINI

THE BISARA OF POORER

THE GATE OF A HUNDRED SORROWS

THE STORY OF MUHAMMID DIN

ON THE STRENGTH OF A LIKENESS

WRESSLEY OF THE FOREIGN OFFICE

BY WORD OF MOUTH

TO BE HELD FOR REFERENCE

LISPETH.

Look, you have cast out Love!  What Gods are these

  You bid me please?

The Three in One, the One in Three?  Not so!

  To my own Gods I go.

It may be they shall give me greater ease

Than your cold Christ and tangled Trinities.

The Convert.

She was the daughter of Sonoo, a Hill-man, and Jadeh his wife.  One year their maize failed, and two bears spent the night in their only poppy-field just above the Sutlej Valley on the Kotgarth side; so, next season, they turned Christian, and brought their baby to the Mission to be baptized.  The Kotgarth Chaplain christened her Elizabeth, and Lispeth is the Hill or pahari pronunciation.

Later, cholera came into the Kotgarth Valley and carried off Sonoo and Jadeh, and Lispeth became half-servant, half-companion to the wife of the then Chaplain of Kotgarth.  This was after the reign of the Moravian missionaries, but before Kotgarth had quite forgotten her title of Mistress of the Northern Hills.

Whether Christianity improved Lispeth, or whether the gods of her own people would have done as much for her under any circumstances, I do not know; but she grew very lovely.  When a Hill girl grows lovely, she is worth traveling fifty miles over bad ground to look upon.  Lispeth had a Greek face--one of those faces people paint so often, and see so seldom.  She was of a pale, ivory color and, for her race, extremely tall.  Also, she possessed eyes that were wonderful; and, had she not been dressed in the abominable print- cloths affected by Missions, you would, meeting her on the hill- side unexpectedly, have thought her the original Diana of the Romans going out to slay.

Lispeth took to Christianity readily, and did not abandon it when she reached womanhood, as do some Hill girls.  Her own people hated her because she had, they said, become a memsahib and washed herself daily; and the Chaplain's wife did not know what to do with her.  Somehow, one cannot ask a stately goddess, five foot ten in her shoes, to clean plates and dishes.  So she played with the Chaplain's children and took classes in the Sunday School, and read all the books in the house, and grew more and more beautiful, like the Princesses in fairy tales.  The Chaplain's wife said that the girl ought to take service in Simla as a nurse or something genteel.  But Lispeth did not want to take service.  She was very happy where she was.

When travellers--there were not many in those years--came to Kotgarth, Lispeth used to lock herself into her own room for fear they might take her away to Simla, or somewhere out into the unknown world.

One day, a few months after she was seventeen years old, Lispeth went out for a walk.  She did not walk in the manner of English ladies--a mile and a half out, and a ride back again.  She covered between twenty and thirty miles in her little constitutionals, all about and about, between Kotgarth and Narkunda.  This time she came back at full dusk, stepping down the breakneck descent into Kotgarth with something heavy in her arms.  The Chaplain's wife was dozing in the drawing-room when Lispeth came in breathing hard and very exhausted with her burden.  Lispeth put it down on the sofa, and said simply:

This is my husband.  I found him on the Bagi Road.  He has hurt himself.  We will nurse him, and when he is well, your husband shall marry him to me.

This was the first mention Lispeth had ever made of her matrimonial views, and the Chaplain's wife shrieked with horror.  However, the man on the sofa needed attention first.  He was a young Englishman, and his head had been cut to the bone by something jagged.  Lispeth said she had found him down the khud, so she had brought him in. He was breathing queerly and was unconscious.

He was put to bed and tended by the Chaplain, who knew something of medicine; and Lispeth waited outside the door in case she could be useful.  She explained to the Chaplain that this was the man she meant to marry; and the Chaplain and his wife lectured her severely on the impropriety of her conduct.  Lispeth listened quietly, and repeated her first proposition.  It takes a great deal of Christianity to wipe out uncivilized Eastern instincts, such as falling in love at first sight.  Lispeth, having found the man she worshipped, did not see why she should keep silent as to her choice.  She had no intention of being sent away, either.  She was going to nurse that Englishman until he was well enough to marry her.  This was her little programme.

After a fortnight of slight fever and inflammation, the Englishman recovered coherence and thanked the Chaplain and his wife, and Lispeth--especially Lispeth--for their kindness.  He was a traveller in the East, he said--they never talked about globe- trotters in those days, when the P. & O. fleet was young and small--and had come from Dehra Dun to hunt for plants and butterflies among the Simla hills.  No one at Simla, therefore, knew anything about him.  He fancied he must have fallen over the cliff while stalking a fern on a rotten tree-trunk, and that his coolies must have stolen his baggage and fled.  He thought he would go back to Simla when he was a little stronger.  He desired no more mountaineering.

He made small haste to go away, and recovered his strength slowly. Lispeth objected to being advised either by the Chaplain or his wife; so the latter spoke to the Englishman, and told him how matters stood in Lispeth's heart.  He laughed a good deal, and said it was very pretty and romantic, a perfect idyl of the Himalayas; but, as he was engaged to a girl at Home, he fancied that nothing would happen.  Certainly he would behave with discretion.  He did that.  Still he found it very pleasant to talk to Lispeth, and walk with Lispeth, and say nice things to her, and call her pet names while he was getting strong enough to go away.  It meant nothing at all to him, and everything in the world to Lispeth.  She was very happy while the fortnight lasted, because she had found a man to love.

Being a savage by birth, she took no trouble to hide her feelings, and the Englishman was amused.  When he went away, Lispeth walked with him, up the Hill as far as Narkunda, very troubled and very miserable.  The Chaplain' s wife, being a good Christian and disliking anything in the shape of fuss or scandal--Lispeth was beyond her management entirely--had told the Englishman to tell Lispeth that he was coming back to marry her.  She is but a child, you know, and, I fear, at heart a heathen, said the Chaplain's wife.  So all the twelve miles up the hill the Englishman, with his arm around Lispeth's waist, was assuring the girl that he would come back and marry her; and Lispeth made him promise over and over again.  She wept on the Narkunda Ridge till he had passed out of sight along the Muttiani path.

Then she dried her tears and went in to Kotgarth again, and said to the Chaplain's wife: He will come back and marry me.  He has gone to his own people to tell them so.  And the Chaplain's wife soothed Lispeth and said: He will come back.  At the end of two months, Lispeth grew impatient, and was told that the Englishman had gone over the seas to England.  She knew where England was, because she had read little geography primers; but, of course, she had no conception of the nature of the sea, being a Hill girl. There was an old puzzle-map of the World in the House.  Lispeth had played with it when she was a child.  She unearthed it again, and put it together of evenings, and cried to herself, and tried to imagine where her Englishman was.  As she had no ideas of distance or steamboats, her notions were somewhat erroneous.  It would not have made the least difference had she been perfectly correct; for the Englishman had no intention of coming back to marry a Hill girl.  He forgot all about her by the time he was butterfly-hunting in Assam.  He wrote a book on the East afterwards.  Lispeth's name did not appear.

At the end of three months, Lispeth made daily pilgrimage to Narkunda to see if her Englishman was coming along the road.  It gave her comfort, and the Chaplain's wife, finding her happier, thought that she was getting over her barbarous and most indelicate folly.  A little later the walks ceased to help Lispeth and her temper grew very bad.  The Chaplain's wife thought this a profitable time to let her know the real state of affairs--that the Englishman had only promised his love to keep her quiet--that he had never meant anything, and that it was wrong and improper of Lispeth to think of marriage with an Englishman, who was of a superior clay, besides being promised in marriage to a girl of his own people.  Lispeth said that all this was clearly impossible, because he had said he loved her, and the Chaplain's wife had, with her own lips, asserted that the Englishman was coming back.

How can what he and you said be untrue? asked Lispeth.

We said it as an excuse to keep you quiet, child, said the Chaplain's wife.

Then you have lied to me, said Lispeth, you and he?

The Chaplain's wife bowed her head, and said nothing.  Lispeth was silent, too for a little time; then she went out down the valley, and returned in the dress of a Hill girl--infamously dirty, but without the nose and ear rings.  She had her hair braided into the long pig-tail, helped out with black thread, that Hill women wear.

I am going back to my own people, said she.  You have killed Lispeth.  There is only left old Jadeh's daughter--the daughter of a pahari and the servant of Tarka Devi.  You are all liars, you English.

By the time that the Chaplain's wife had recovered from the shock of the announcement that Lispeth had 'verted to her mother's gods, the girl had gone; and she never came back.

She took to her own unclean people savagely, as if to make up the arrears of the life she had stepped out of; and, in a little time, she married a wood-cutter who beat her, after the manner of paharis, and her beauty faded soon.

There is no law whereby you can account for the vagaries of the heathen, said the Chaplain's wife, and I believe that Lispeth was always at heart an infidel.  Seeing she had been taken into the Church of England at the mature age of five weeks, this statement does not do credit to the Chaplain's wife.

Lispeth was a very old woman when she died.  She always had a perfect command of English, and when she was sufficiently drunk, could sometimes be induced to tell the story of her first love- affair.

It was hard then to realize that the bleared, wrinkled creature, so like a wisp of charred rag, could ever have been Lispeth of the Kotgarth Mission.

THREE AND--AN EXTRA.

 When halter and heel ropes are slipped, do not give chase with sticks but with gram.

   Punjabi Proverb.

 After marriage arrives a reaction, sometimes a big, sometimes a little one; but it comes sooner or later, and must be tided over by both parties if they desire the rest of their lives to go with the current.

In the case of the Cusack-Bremmils this reaction did not set in till the third year after the wedding.  Bremmil was hard to hold at the best of times; but he was a beautiful husband until the baby died and Mrs. Bremmil wore black, and grew thin, and mourned as if the bottom of the universe had fallen out.  Perhaps Bremmil ought to have comforted her.  He tried to do so, I think; but the more he comforted the more Mrs. Bremmil grieved, and, consequently, the more uncomfortable Bremmil grew.  The fact was that they both needed a tonic.  And they got it.  Mrs. Bremmil can afford to laugh now, but it was no laughing matter to her at the time.

You see, Mrs. Hauksbee appeared on the horizon; and where she existed was fair chance of trouble.  At Simla her bye-name was the Stormy Petrel.  She had won that title five times to my own certain knowledge.  She was a little, brown, thin, almost skinny, woman, with big, rolling, violet-blue eyes, and the sweetest manners in the world.  You had only to mention her name at afternoon teas for every woman in the room to rise up, and call her--well--NOT blessed.  She was clever, witty, brilliant, and sparkling beyond most of her kind; but possessed of many devils of malice and mischievousness.  She could be nice, though, even to her own sex.  But that is another story.

Bremmil went off at score after the baby's death and the general discomfort that followed, and Mrs. Hauksbee annexed him.  She took no pleasure in hiding her captives.  She annexed him publicly, and saw that the public saw it.  He rode with her, and walked with her, and talked with her, and picnicked with her, and tiffined at Peliti's with her, till people put up their eyebrows and said: Shocking!  Mrs. Bremmil stayed at home turning over the dead baby's frocks and crying into the empty cradle.  She did not care to do anything else.  But some eight dear, affectionate lady- friends explained the situation at length to her in case she should miss the cream of it.  Mrs. Bremmil listened quietly, and thanked them for their good offices.  She was not as clever as Mrs. Hauksbee, but she was no fool.  She kept her own counsel, and did not speak to Bremmil of what she had heard.  This is worth remembering.  Speaking to, or crying over, a husband never did any good yet.

When Bremmil was at home, which was not often, he was more affectionate than usual; and that showed his hand.  The affection was forced partly to soothe his own conscience and partly to soothe Mrs. Bremmil.  It failed in both regards.

Then the A.-D.-C. in Waiting was commanded by Their Excellencies, Lord and Lady Lytton, to invite Mr. and Mrs. Cusack-Bremmil to Peterhoff on July 26th at 9.30 P. M.--Dancing in the bottom- left-hand corner.

I can't go, said Mrs. Bremmil, it is too soon after poor little Florrie . . . but it need not stop you, Tom.

She meant what she said then, and Bremmil said that he would go just to put in an appearance.  Here he spoke the thing which was not; and Mrs. Bremmil knew it.  She guessed--a woman's guess is much more accurate than a man's certainty--that he had meant to go from the first, and with Mrs. Hauksbee.  She sat down to think, and the outcome of her thoughts was that the memory of a dead child was worth considerably less than the affections of a living husband. She made her plan and staked her all upon it.  In that hour she discovered that she knew Tom Bremmil thoroughly, and this knowledge she acted on.

Tom, said she, I shall be dining out at the Longmores' on the evening of the 26th.  You'd better dine at the club.

This saved Bremmil from making an excuse to get away and dine with Mrs. Hauksbee, so he was grateful, and felt small and mean at the same time--which was wholesome.  Bremmil left the house at five for a ride.  About half-past five in the evening a large leather- covered basket came in from Phelps' for Mrs. Bremmil.  She was a woman who knew how to dress; and she had not spent a week on designing that dress and having it gored, and hemmed, and herring- boned, and tucked and rucked (or whatever the terms are) for nothing.  It was a gorgeous dress--slight mourning.  I can't describe it, but it was what The Queen calls a creation--a thing that hit you straight between the eyes and made you gasp.  She had not much heart for what she was going to do; but as she glanced at the long mirror she had the satisfaction of knowing that she had never looked so well in her life.  She was a large blonde and, when she chose, carried herself superbly.

After the dinner at the Longmores, she went on to the dance--a little late--and encountered Bremmil with Mrs. Hauksbee on his arm. That made her flush, and as the men crowded round her for dances she looked magnificent.  She filled up all her dances except three, and those she left blank.  Mrs. Hauksbee caught her eye once; and she knew it was war--real war--between them.  She started handicapped in the struggle, for she had ordered Bremmil about just the least little bit in the world too much; and he was beginning to resent it.  Moreover, he had never seen his wife look so lovely. He stared at her from doorways, and glared at her from passages as she went about with her partners; and the more he stared, the more taken was he.  He could scarcely believe that this was the woman with the red eyes and the black stuff gown who used to weep over the eggs at breakfast.

Mrs. Hauksbee did her best to hold him in play, but, after two dances, he crossed over to his wife and asked for a dance.

I'm afraid you've come too late, MISTER Bremmil, she said, with her eyes twinkling.

Then he begged her to give him a dance, and, as a great favor, she allowed him the fifth waltz.  Luckily 5 stood vacant on his programme.  They danced it together, and there was a little flutter round the room.  Bremmil had a sort of notion that his wife could dance, but he never knew she danced so divinely.  At the end of that waltz he asked for another--as a favor, not as a right; and Mrs. Bremmil said: Show me your programme, dear!  He showed it as a naughty little schoolboy hands up contraband sweets to a master. There was a fair sprinkling of H on it besides H at supper. Mrs. Bremmil said nothing, but she smiled contemptuously, ran her pencil through 7 and 9--two H's--and returned the card with her own name written above--a pet name that only she and her husband used.  Then she shook her finger at him, and said, laughing: Oh, you silly, SILLY boy!

Mrs. Hauksbee heard that, and--she owned as much--felt that she had the worst of it.  Bremmil accepted 7 and 9 gratefully.  They danced 7, and sat out 9 in one of the little tents.  What Bremmil said and what Mrs. Bremmil said is no concern of any one's.

When the band struck up The Roast Beef of Old England, the two went out into the verandah, and Bremmil began looking for his wife's dandy (this was before 'rickshaw days) while she went into the cloak-room.  Mrs. Hauksbee came up and said: You take me in to supper, I think, Mr. Bremmil.  Bremmil turned red and looked foolish.  Ah--h'm!  I'm going home with my wife, Mrs. Hauksbee.  I think there has been a little mistake.  Being a man, he spoke as though Mrs. Hauksbee were entirely responsible.

Mrs. Bremmil came out of the cloak-room in a swansdown cloak with a white cloud round her head.  She looked radiant; and she had a right to.

The couple went off in the darkness together, Bremmil riding very close to the dandy.

Then says Mrs. Hauksbee to me--she looked a trifle faded and jaded in the lamplight: "Take my word for

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