rudyard kipling

32
Rudyard Rudyard Kipling Kipling 1865 - 1865 - 1936 1936

Upload: school

Post on 14-Jan-2015

4.746 views

Category:

Education


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Famous English Authors

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Rudyard Kipling

Rudyard Rudyard KiplingKipling

1865 - 1865 - 19361936

Page 2: Rudyard Kipling

• English short-story writer, novelist and poet, remembered for his celebration of British imperialism and heroism in India and Burma. Kipling's glorification of the British Empire and racial prejudices

Page 3: Rudyard Kipling

• Kipling was the first Englishman to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature (1907). His most popular works include The Jungle Book (1894) and the Just So Stories (1902), both children's classics though they have attracted adult audiences also.

Page 4: Rudyard Kipling

• Rudyard Kipling was born on December 30, 1865, in Bombay, India, where his father was an arts and crafts teacher at the Jeejeebhoy School of Art. His mother was a sister-in-law of the painter Edward Burne-Jones. At the age of six he was taken to England by his parents and left for five years at a foster home at Southsea.

Page 5: Rudyard Kipling

•In 1878 Kipling entered United Services College, a boarding school in North Devon. It was an expensive institution that specialized in training for entry into military academies. His poor eyesight and mediocre results as a student ended his hopes for a military career.

Page 6: Rudyard Kipling

• However, Kipling recalled these years in a lighter tone in one of his most popular books, Stalky & Co (1899). Kipling returned to India in 1882, where he worked as a journalist in Lahore for the Civil and Military Gazette (1882-87) and as an assistant editor and overseas correspondent in Allahabad for the Pioneer (1887-89). The stories written during his last two years in India were collected in The Phantom Rickshaw. (1888)

Page 7: Rudyard Kipling

• Kipling's short stories and verses gained success in the late 1880s in England, to which he returned in 1889, and was hailed as a literary heir to Charles Dickens. Between the years 1889 and 1892, Kipling lived in London and published Life's Handicap (1891), a collection of Indian stories and Barrack-Room Ballads, a collection of poems that included "Gunga Din".

Page 8: Rudyard Kipling

• Kipling married Caroline Starr Balestier, with whom he collaborated on a novel, The Naulakha(1892). The young couple moved to the United States. Kipling was dissatisfied with the life in Vermont, and after the death of his daughter, he took his family back to England and settled in Burwash, Sussex. Kipling's marriage was not in all respects happy. During these restless years Kipling produced Many Inventions (1893), The Jungle Book (1894), The Second Jungle Book (1895), The Seven Seas (1896) and Captains Courageous(1897)

Page 9: Rudyard Kipling
Page 10: Rudyard Kipling
Page 11: Rudyard Kipling

• Widely regarded as unofficial poet laureate, Kipling refused this and many honors, among them the Order of Merit. During the Boer War in 1899 Kipling spent several months in South Africa. In 1902 he moved to Sussex, also spending time in South Africa.

Page 12: Rudyard Kipling

• Kim, widely considered Kipling's best novel appeared in 1901. The story, set in India, depicted the adventures of an orphaned son of a sergeant in an Irish regiment. The children's historical work Puck of Pook's Hill appeared in 1906 and its sequel Rewards and Fairies in 1910

Page 13: Rudyard Kipling

• Soon after Kipling had received the Nobel Prize, his output of fiction and poems began to decline. His son was killed in the World War I, and in 1923 Kipling published The Irish Guards In The Great War , a history of his son's regiment. Between the years 1922 and 1925 he was a rector at the University of St. Andrews

Page 14: Rudyard Kipling
Page 15: Rudyard Kipling

Batemans R. Kipling's HouseBatemans R. Kipling's HouseSussex.Sussex.

Page 16: Rudyard Kipling

R. Kipling’s Memorial R. Kipling’s Memorial HomeHome

Windsor, Alma RoadWindsor, Alma Road

Page 17: Rudyard Kipling
Page 18: Rudyard Kipling

• Kipling died on January 18, 1936 in London, and was buried in Poet's Corner at Westminster Abbey. His autobiography, Something Of Myself, appeared posthumously in 1937.

Page 19: Rudyard Kipling

The Book of JungleThe Book of Jungle

Page 20: Rudyard Kipling
Page 21: Rudyard Kipling
Page 22: Rudyard Kipling
Page 23: Rudyard Kipling
Page 24: Rudyard Kipling
Page 25: Rudyard Kipling
Page 26: Rudyard Kipling
Page 27: Rudyard Kipling

•R. Kipling’s

Coat of Arms

Page 28: Rudyard Kipling
Page 29: Rudyard Kipling

Just So Stories

Page 30: Rudyard Kipling
Page 31: Rudyard Kipling
Page 32: Rudyard Kipling