Kipling Sahib
Page 46
Christopher Hitchens, Love, Poverty and War, 2005.
Peter Hopkirk, Quest for Kim: In Search of Kipling’s Great Game, 1996; Trespassers on the Roof of the World, 1977.
Robert Hyam, Empire and Sexuality, 1990.
Shamsul Islam, Kipling’s Law: A Study of his Philosophy of Life, 1975.
K. Jamilludin, The Tropic Sun: Rudyard Kipling and the Raj, 1974.
Tim Jeal, Baden-Powell, 1989.
D. C. Kala, Frederick Wilson: ‘Hulson Sahib’ of Garhwal 1816–83, 2006.
Pamela Kanwar, Imperial Simla: the Political Culture of the Raj, 1990.
Peter Keating, Kipling the Poet, 1994.
John Keay, The Gilgit Game, 1979; Where Men and Mountains Meet, 1982.
Sandra Kemp, Kipling’s Hidden Narratives, 1988.
Omar Khan, From Kashmir to Kabul: the Photographs of William Baker and John Burke 1861–1900, 2002.
Kipling Society, The Kipling Journal, 1927–2007.
Sean Lang, ‘Saving India Through Its Women’, History Today, September 2005.
Marghanita Laski, From Palm to Pine: Rudyard Kipling Abroad and at Home, 1987.
Lorna Lee, Trix: Kipling’s Forgotten Sister, 2004
Sir Roper Lethbridge, ‘The Press in India’, Journal of the East India Association, New Series, Vol. V, 1914.
Sir Alfred Comyn Lyall, The Life of the Marquis of Dufferin and Ava, 1905; Studies in Literature and History, 1915.
Andrew Lycett, Rudyard Kipling, 1999.
Philip Mason, Kipling: the Glass, the Shadow and the Fire, 1975.
Partha Mitter, Much Maligned Monsters, 1992.
B. J. Moore-Gilbert, Kipling and ‘Orientalism’, 1986.
Peter Mudford, Birds of a Different Plumage: a Study of British-Indian Relations, 1974.
Adam Nicholson, The Hated Wife: Carrie Kipling 1862–1939, 2001.
Harold Orel, A Kipling Chronology, 1990.
Mark Pafford, Kipling’s Indian Fiction, 1989.
Norman Page, A Kipling Companion, 1984; From Bombay to Southsea: the Two Childhoods of Rudyard Kipling, 2002.
Bishambhar Nath Pande, Allahabad Retrospect and Prospect, 1955.
Neil Philip, ed., The Illustrated Kipling, 1988.
W. F. C. C. Plowden, Records of the Chichele Plowdens, 1914.
Violet Powell, Flora Annie Steel: Novelist of India, 1981.
M. Naeem Qureshi, ‘A Museum for British Lahore’, History Today, September 1997.
K. Bhaskara Rao, Rudyard Kipling’s India, 1967.
F. Reid and D. Washbrook, ‘Kipling’s Kim and Imperialism’, History Today, Vol. 32,1982.
Andrew Roberts, Salisbury: Victorian Titan, 1999.
Andrew Rutherford, ed., Kipling’s Mind and Art, 1964.
Edward Said, Introduction and Notes to Kim, 1987.
Martin Seymour-Smith, Rudyard Kipling, 1989.
Edward Shanks, Rudyard Kipling: A Study in Literature and Political Ideas, 1940.
F. H. Skrine, The Life of Sir William Wilson Hunter, 1901.
J. K. Stanford, Ladies in the Sun, 1962.
John Whitehead, ed., Mrs Hauksbee and Co: Tales of Simla Life by Rudyard Kipling, 1998.
Angus Wilson, The Strange Ride of Rudyard Kipling: His Life and Works, 1977.
Lewis D. Wurgaft, The Imperial Imagination: Magic and Myth in Kipling’s India, 1983.
Zoe Yalland, Boxwallahs: The British in Cawnpore 1857–1901, 1994.
Kenneth Young, ed., The Diaries of Sir Robert Bruce Lockhart, 1973. Select bibliography of Anglo-Indian Verse and Fiction c. 1857–90
‘A. B. C. S.’, Current Repentance, Calcutta 1885.
George Aberigh-Mackay (‘Ali Baba’), sketches for Vanity Fair 1878–9 pub. as Twenty-One Days in India, being the Tour of Sir Ali Baba, 1879; sketches for Bombay Gazette pub. as The Teapot Series: Serious Reflections by a Political Orphan, 1880.
Edward Aitken, (‘E. H. A.’), sketches for Times of India pub. as Tribes on my Frontier, 1883: Behind the Bungalow, 1889: Naturalist on the Prowl, 1896.
‘Ali Baba’ – see George Aberigh-Mackay.
‘Aliph Cheem’ – see Walter Yeldham.
Alexander Allardyce, The City of Sunshine, 1877.
‘Alpha’, Some Railway Servants and Other Sketches, CMG Press, 1890.
Anon., Gowry: An Indian Village Girl, 1876.
Anon., The Indian Heroine, 1877.
Anon., How Will It End?, 1887.
Anon., Lotus: A Psychological Romance, 1888.
Anon., The Lover’s Stratagem, 1889.
Anon., The Morlands: A Tale of Anglo-Indian Life, 1888.
Anon., New Tale of a Grandfather: or, How Herat Was Lost and Won, 1885.
Anon., The Rajah’s Heir, 1890.
Anon., Told On the Verandah: Passages in the Life of Colonel Bowlong, Set Down By His Adjutant, c. 1890.
Captain George Atkinson, Curry and Rice on 40 Plates, or the Ingredients of Social Life at Our Station in India, 1859; Indian Spices for English Tables; ie Rare Relish of fun from the far east, being the adventures of ‘our special correspondent in India’, 1860.
D. Aubrey, Letters from Bombay, 1884.
A. J. Bamford, Turbans and Tails, or Sketches in the Unromantic East, 1888.
J. Barras, Rama: A Sensational Story of Indian Village Life, 1886.
‘Paul Benison’– see John Walter Sherer.
Thomas Frank Bignold, Leviora: Being the Rhymes of a Successful Competitor, 1888.
Frederick Boyle, Legends of the Bungalow, 1882.
Lady Annie Brassie, Sunshine and Storm in the East, 1880.
‘H. Broughton’ – see George Trevelyan.
Geraldine Butt, Verses, CMG Press, 1884.
Henry James Byron, Aladdin, CMG Press, 1882.
Mrs H. M. Cadell (Jessie Ellen Nash), Ida Craven, 1873.
Robert C. Caldwell, The Chutney Lyrics: A Collection of Comic Pieces in Verse on Indian Subjects, 1871.
‘C. A. L.’ – see Sir Alfred Comyn Lyall.
Gen. Sir George Chesney, A True Reformer, 1873; The Dilemma: A Tale of the Mutiny; 1880; Indian Polity, 1882; The Private Secretary, 1884.
‘Owen Christian’ – see Henry Curwen.
‘C. L. T.’ – see Lionel James.
‘C. M. a Bombay Walla’ – see C. J. MacDowall
‘M. J. Colquhoun’ (Mrs Charles Scott), Under Orders, 1882; Primus in India, 1885; Every Inch a Soldier, 1888.
F. M. Crawfurd, Mr Isaacs: A Tale of Modern India, 1882.
‘Tom Cringle’ – see William Walker.
Mrs B. M. Croker, Proper Pride, 1882; Pretty Miss Neville, 1883; Someone Else, 1885; Diana Barrington, 1888: A Romance of Central India, 1888; Two Masters, 1890; A Third Person, 1893, etc.
Sir Henry S. Cunningham, Wheat and Tares: A Tale, 1862; Chronicles of Dustypore: A Tale of Modern Anglo-Indian Society, 1877; The Heriots, The Coeruleans: A Vacation Idyll, 1887; Sybilia, 1889, etc.
Henry Curwen (ed. Times of India), (as ‘Owen Christian’), Poems, 1885; Zit and Xoe, 1886; Lady Bluebeard, 1888; Dr Hermione, 1890.
Edith Cuthell (‘An Indian Exile’), In Tent and Bungalow, 1890; Indian Idylls, 1892, etc.
William Dalton, The White Elephant, 1860; Phankor the Adventurer, 1862.
Tim Daly (poss. pseud.) (‘F. E. W.’), Sketches of Native Life, 1869; Mess Stories, 1872.
George Dick, Fitch and His Fortunes: An Anglo-Indian Novel, 1877.
Sir Henry Durand (‘John Roy’), Helen Trevelyan: or, The Ruling Race, 1892.
‘E. H. A.’ – see Edward Aitken.
Robert H. Elliott, Written on Their Foreheads, 1879.
‘F. E. W.’ – see Tim Daly.
J. F. Fanthorne (‘J. F. F.’), Mariam, 1886.
G. M. Fenn, Begumbagh: A Tale of the Indian Mutiny, 1890.
Arthur Brownlow Fforde, The Trotter: A Poona Mystery, 1890; The Subaltern, the Policeman and the Little Girl: An Anglo-Indian Sketch, 1890; The Maid and the Idol, 1891; The Little Owl, 1893, etc.
Mrs E. M. Field, Here�
�s Rue for You, 1883; Bryda: A Story of the Indian Mutiny, 1888.
Mrs H. A. Fletcher, Poppied Sleep, 1887.
‘Forrest, R. E.’ – see Maj.-Gen. D. H. Thomas.
‘Gillean’ – see J. N. H. Maclean.
Geraldine Glasgow, Black and White, 1889.
‘Maxwell Gray’– see Mary Tuttiett.
James Grant, First Love and Last Love: A Tale of the Indian Mutiny, 1868; Only An Ensign: A Tale of the Retreat from Kabul, 1871.
J. Percy Groves, The Duke’s Own, 1887.
Ian Hamilton, The Ballad of Hadji, 1888.
Beaumont Harrington, Ashes for Bread, 1884.
‘H. G. K.’ – see Henry George Keene.
W. A. Hunter, The Trial of Muluk Chand: A Romance of Criminal Administration in Bengal, 1888.
J. R. Hutchinson, More Than He Bargained For: An Anglo-Indian Tale of Passion, 1887.
‘An Indian Detective’, A Romance of Indian Crime, 1885.
‘An Indian Exile’ – see Edith E. Cuthell.
William W. Ireland, Randolph Methyl: A Story of Anglo-Indian Life, 1863.
Henry C. Irwin, Rhymes and Renderings, 1885.
P. W. Jacob, Hindoo Tales, 1873.
‘J. A. N.’ – see John R. Denning.
‘J. F. F.’– see J. F. Fanthorne.
Henry George Keene (‘H. G. K.’), contrib. to Pioneer and Chameleon; Under the Rose: Poems Written Chiefly in India, 1868; The Death of Akbar and Other Poems, 1875; Peepul Leaves: Poems Written in India, 1879; Poems Original and Translated, 1882; as ‘J. Smith, Junior’, Sketches in Indian Ink, 1891.
Charles Arthur Kelly, Delhi and other Poems, 1872.
‘Kentish Rag’ – see Bernard R. Ward.
W. H. G. Kingston, The Young Rajah: A Story of Young Life and Adventures, 1876.
Maj. Charles Kirby, The Adventures of An Arcot Rupee, 1867.
‘A Lady’, The Brahmin’s Prophecy, 1875.
John Lang, (‘Mofussilite’), ed. The Mofussilite from 1845, novels serialised in the Mofussilite: Too Clever By Half: or, The Harroways, 1852; The Wetherbys, Father and Son: or Sundry Chapters of Indian Experience, 1853; Will He Marry Her? 1859; Who Was the Child?, 1859; My Friend’s Wife: or, York, You’re Wanted, 1859.
L. K. Laurie (‘Pekin’) (contrib. to Pioneer); Sketches in the C. P.: or, Sketches in Prose and Verse, 1881.
Mary E. Leslie, India and Other Poems, 1856; Sorrows, Aspirations and Legends of India, 1859, Sacred Lyrics and Sonnets: Heart Echoes from the East, 1861.
S. K. Levett-Yeats, The Heart of Denise, 1889; The Romance of Guard Mulligan, 1893; The Widow Lamport, 1894.
‘Lunka’, Whiffs: Anglo-Indian and Indian, 1891.
Sir Alfred Comyn Lyall (contrib. to Calcutta Review, Englishman etc.), Verses Written in India, 1889.
C. J. MacDowall (‘C. M. a Bombay Walla’), The Chutney Papers: Society, Shikar and Sport in India, 1884.
J. N. H. Maclean (‘Gillean’), The Ranee: A Legend of the Indian Mutiny, 1887.
H. F. Manisty, Horama: A Poem in Indian Exile, 1890.
Florence Marryat (afterwards Mrs Ross-Church), Love’s Conflict, 1865; For Ever and Ever, 1866; Gup: Sketches of Anglo-Indian Life and Character, 1868; Nelly Brooke, 1869; Veronique, 1869, etc.
Philip Meadows Taylor, Confessions of A Thug, 1839; Tippoo Sultan, 1840; Tara: A Mahratta Tale, 1863; Ralph Darnell, 1865; The Fatal Amulet, 1872; Seeta, 1872; The Story of my Life, 1877; A Noble Omen, 1878.
‘Mirza Moorad Alee Beg “Gaekwaree”’, Lalun the Beragun, or The Battle of
Panipat: A Legend of Hindoostan, 1884.
‘A Moffusilite’ (but not John Lang), The Confessions of Meajahn, Darogah of Police, 1869.
‘Moffusilite’ – see John Lang.
Lady Sydney Morgan (Sydney Owenson), Luxima, The Prophetess: A Tale of India, 1859.
‘M. W.’, How Will It End? The One in Madness, Both in Misery: A Story of Anglo-Indian Life, 1887.
‘N. J. A.’ – see J. R. Denning.
William N. Norris, No New Thing, 1883.
John B. Norton, verses inc. Nemesis: a Poem in Four Cantos, 1861.
Ivan O’Bierne, Jim’s Wife, 1889; The Colonel’s Crime, c. 1890; Doctor Victor, 1891, etc.
E. O’Donovan, Merv: A Story of Adventure and Captivity, 1883.
Diana Oldenbuck, A Legend of Spur and Spear, 1889.
C. P. A. Oman, Eastwards: or, Realities of Indian Life, 1864.
‘Our Domestic Novelist’, The Perilous Adventures of the Knight Sir Tommy, 1871.
‘Owen Christian’ – see Henry Curwen.
James Payne, A Confidential Agent, 1881.
‘Pekin’ – see L. K. Laurie.
H. A. B. Pittard, Poems, 1884.
R. Planche, The Discreet Princess, 1873.
‘A Planter’s Mate’, A New Clearing: A Medley of Prose and Verse, 1884.
J. Pomeroy, Home from India, 1869.
Iltudus Prichard, The Chronicles of Budgepore: or, Sketches of Life in Upper India, 1871.
Capt. Mayne Reid, The Cliff Climbers: or, Lost in the Himalayas, 1864; The Lost Mountain: A Tale of Sonora, 1883; The Star of the Empire, 1886.
Capt. R. Reid, Revelations of an Indian Detective, 1885.
Phil Robinson (ed. Pioneer), (as ‘Ronin’), Nugae Indicae: On Leave in my Compound, 1871; as ‘Chameleon’ ed., The Chameleon, An Anglo-Indian Periodical of Light Literature, 1871–4; In My Indian Garden, 1878; Under the Punkah, 1881; Chasing a Fortune: Tales and Sketches, 1884; Tigers at Large, 1885.
Horatio B. Rowney, The Young Zemindar, 1883.
‘John Roy’– see Sir Henry Durand.
John Walter Sherer (‘Paul Benison’), The Conjurer’s Daughter, 1880; At Home in India, 1882; Images of Indian Days, 1885; Worldly Tales, 1886.
Maud Sheridan, Elaine’s Story: A Tale of the Afghan Frontier, 1879; Lady Hastings: An Indian Story, 1880.
Herbert Sherring, Light and Shade: Tales and Verse, 1884.
Alfred Percy Sinnett (ed. Pioneer), Karma: A Novel, 1886.
C. H. Sisson, Once in a Way: A Jubbalpore Miscellany, 1866.
‘John Smith’ – see H. G. Keene.
‘Son Gruel’, What We Met in the Mufussil, 1887.
Flora Annie Steel, Wide-awake Stories for Children, 1884; Tales of the Punjab, illus. by J. Lockwood Kipling, 1894; From the Five Rivers, 1893; Miss Stuart’s Legacy, 1893, The Potter’s Thumb, 1894, etc.
Charles Swynnerton, The Adventures of Rajah Rasalu, 1884.
C. H. Tawney, The Kathakosha or Treasury of Stories, illus. by J. Lockwood Kipling, 1895.
Maj.-Gen. D. H. Thomas (‘Forrest, R. E.’), The Touchstone of Peril, c.1889; Eight Days: A Tale of the Indian Mutiny, 1891, etc.
D. H. Thomas, The Touchstone of Peril, 1886.
Septimus S. Thorburn, David Leslie: A Story of the Afghan Frontier, 1879.
Sir George Trevelyan, (as ‘H. Broughton’), The Dawk Bungalow: or, Is His Appointment Pucka?, 1863; The Competition Wallah, 1864.
William Walker, Tom Cringle’s Letters on Practical Subjects Suggested by Experiences in Bombay, 1863; Jottings of an Invalid, 1865.
Elliot Walters, Gutter and Mansion: or, Shadows of Anglo-Indian Life, A Tale, 1890.
William Waterfield, Indian Ballads and Other Poems, 1865.
H. B. M. Watson, Marahuna: A Romance, 1888.
William Trego Webb, (‘William Trego’), Indian Lyrics, 1882.
‘Jane Williams’, Lilian: A Racy Indian Novel, 1888.
Bernard Wycliffe, The Musulman’s Lament Over the Body of Tipoo Sultan, 1864.
Major Walter Yeldham (‘Aliph Cheem’), Lays of Ind, 1871; Lays of Ind, new ed., 1873; Lays of the Sea-Side, 1887.
Yoke-Wright, A Double Wedding, 1885.
Charlotte M. Yonge, The Young Step-Mother, c. 1860; The Clever Woman of the Family, c. 1865.
Index
Aberigh-Mackay, George (‘Political Orphan’), 75–6, 167
‘Absent-Minded Beggar, The’, 3, 351
Academy, 273
adultery: in British India, 163
Aesthetic Movement, 98
Afghan War, Second, 275, 276, 335
Afghanistan, 109
Afghans, 208–9, 209
Agra, 247, 248
A. H. Wheeler and Co., 254–5, 269, 292
Ahmed Khel, Battle of, 275
Aitken, Edward, 54–5
Akbar, Emperor, 79, 245
Ali, Mahbub, 209–10
Alighar Muslim University, 286
Allahabad, xi, 50, 245–7; description, 246–7; history, 244–6; Kipling in, 245–6, 253–4, 272–3; massacres (1857), 245, 247
Allahabad Club, 301
Allahabad University, 54
Allen, Charles (‘C. T.’), x, xi
Allen, George, x-xi, xi-xii, 50–2, 101, 112, 272, 319; background, x; business interests, x, 115, 246; and CMG, 113, 115–16, 233; and departure of Kipling from India, 272, 290; excluded from United Services Club, 142; and Hearsey scandal, 287; hiring of Kipling as assistant editor of CMG, x, 117; and Hume, 143, 144; influence of Government on, 131–2; and Pioneer, 51–2, 75, 143, 252–3; publishing of Kipling’s poems in Pioneer, 177; relationship with Kipling, xi, 50–1, 205–6, 253, 266, 269; and Week’s News, 251, 274
Allen, Maud, x, 247, 266, 270
Allen’s Weekly Mail, 247
Alliance Bank of Simla, 139
Allingham, William, 17
Amber fortress, 250
American Civil War, 26
Amherst, Lord, 136
Anarkali (Lahore), 79–80
Appomattox, 28
‘Arithmetic on the Frontier’, 217–18, 224
Armstrong, Lieutenant J. E. O., 217
Arnold, Edwin: The Light of Asia, 97, 358
‘At the End of the Passage’, 133, 215, 309
Athenaeum, 313
Athenaeum Club, 3, 341
Atkinson, Captain George, 20
Aurangzeb, Emperor: ‘royal’ mosque (Lahore), 78
‘Ave Imperatrix’, 92, 104–5, 178
‘Baa, Baa, Black Sheep’, 47, 66, 71, 92–3, 119, 274
Back Bay Reclamation Scheme, 27–8
Badshahi Mosque (Lahore), 80
Baksh, Kadir, 122, 169, 290, 292, 319, 345
Baldwin, Alfred, 42
Baldwin, Louisa, 43
Baldwin, Louisa (née Macdonald), 17, 42