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...Rudyard Kipling: "I wrote an inscription and epitaph for a monument which the town of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, is erecting to the 350 men from that place who fell in the War. My contribution concluded: "From little towns in a far land we came...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Imaginary Interviews: Jun. 23, 1924 | 6/23/1924 | See Source »

Engaged. Miss Elsie Kipling, daughter of Rudyard Kipling, famed British author, to Captain George Bambridge, M.C., Attache to the British Embassy in Madrid...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Jun. 16, 1924 | 6/16/1924 | See Source »

...Fisher '24 "Speech at the Funeral of a Brother" Robert Ingersoll James Harry Smith Jr. '25 "The Bells" Edgar Allen Poe Arthur Gustave King '26 "The Necessity of Force" John M. Thurston Paul Whitcomb Williams '25 "The Minstrel's Curse" Ludwig Uhland Milton Arnold Kramer '26 "The Last Suttee" Rudyard Kipling Alvan Ruckman Grier Jr. '26 "Revelation" Robert Service Edward Adams Sawin '25 "Blainc--the Plumed Knight" Robert Ingersoll Julian Hackett Weiss '25 "A Vision of War" Robert Ingersoll

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WILL AWARD WADE AND BOYLSTON PRIZES TONIGHT | 5/8/1924 | See Source »

...effect of the fairy tale, as told by Rudyard Kipling or Lady Gregory is obviously to arouse a feeling of intense patriotism of aversion to the rude outsider--of fellowship with one's own countrymen. And the work of Yeats, Lady Gregory perhaps of Lord Dunsany, who, however, created a mythology quite his own--was evident enough in the reawakening Irish nationalism, long dormant; in the Gaelicising of everything, down to postage stamps--even when a German professor had to be imported to assist. The national Bernard Shaw, realizing full well that the difference between the English and the Irish...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ROCKING THE CRADLE | 3/28/1924 | See Source »

...home, and we can deal with them." More remarkable than his policy was the improved tone of his oratory. No longer did he stress his inability as a phrasemaker, but burst into floods of forceful phrases which caused surprise to some and to others a suspicion that his cousin, Rudyard Kipling, had had a hand in framing his speeches...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COMMONWEALTH: Electioneers | 12/10/1923 | See Source »

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