Kipling, Rudyard (b. 1865)

Kipling, Rudyard, story-teller and poet, born in Bombay, and educated in England; went out to India as a journalist; his stories respect Anglo-Indian, and especially military, life in India, and his “Soldiers Three,” with the rest that followed, such as “Wee Willie Winkie,” gained for him an immediate and wide reputation; as a poet, his most successful effort is his “Barrack-Room Ballads,” instinct with a martial spirit, in 1864; he is a writer of conspicuous realistic power; he deems it the mission of civilisation to drill the savage races in humanity; (b. 1865).

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Kipchaks * Kirby, William
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Kingsley, Henry
Kingston
Kingston-upon-Thames
Kingston, W. H. G.
Kingstown
Kinkel, Johann Gottfried
Kinross
Kinsale
Kintyre
Kipchaks
Kipling, Rudyard
Kirby, William
Kirghiz
Kirk Session
Kirkcaldy
Kirkcudbright
Kirkdale Cave
Kirke's Lambs
Kirkintilloch
Kirkwall
Kirriemuir