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Authors: Carl Woodring,James Shapiro

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The Columbia History of British Poetry (125 page)

BOOK: The Columbia History of British Poetry
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Page 508
Then 'ere's to the Sons o' the Widow,
   Wherever, 'owever they roam.
'Ere's all they desire, an' if they require
   A speedy return to their 'ome.
(Poor beggars!they'll never see 'ome!)
With such Cockney speech
Barrack-Room Ballads
(1892), which included "The Widow at Windsor" and which established Kipling's fame, at once celebrated and denigrated the British soldier in strikingly realistic poems. "Danny Deever," among the most notable of Kipling's figures, is "the Regiment's disgrace," who has shot a "comrade sleepin'." In focusing on the reactions by Danny's fellow soldiers to his hanging, the poem presents a narrator interpolating remarks between exchanges of dialogue, as in the opening:
"What makes you look so white, so white?" said Files-on-Parade.
"I'm dreadin' what I've got to watch," the Colour-Sergeant said.
  For they're hangin' Danny Deever, you can hear the Dead March
     play,
The regiment's in 'ollow squarethey're hangin' him to-day.
The hanging, undescribed by Kipling, is witnessed by Files-on-Parade, who asks the Colour-Sergeant, "'What's that that whimpers over'ead?'" The response: "'It's Danny's soul that's passin' now.'" The reactions of the Colour-Sergeant and of the "shakin'" young recruits are presented without overt moralizing; rather, such responses mirror the stern but necessary rigors of military life. In "Tommy" the common British soldier learns with bitterness of the hypocrisy evoked by his uniform: ''I went into a public-'ouse to get a pint o' beer, / The publican 'e up an'sez, 'We serve no red-coats here.'" Kipling's conviction that such British "'eroes" are merely flawed human beings emerges in Tommy's lines: "if sometimes our conduck isn't all your fancy paints, / Why, single men in barricks don't grow into plaster saints." And "it's 'Saviour of 'is country' when the guns begin to shoot," but "Tommy ain't a bloomin' foolyou bet that Tommy sees!"
The musicality of Kipling's verse has attracted composers to set it to song, as in "Mandalay," once a favorite in the concert halls:
On the road to Mandalay,
Where the flyin'-fishes play,
An' the dawn comes up like thunder outer China 'crost the Bay!
 
Page 509
Although the temple-bells urge, "Come you back, you British soldier; come you back to Mandalay!" the image of a Burmese girl "a-wastin' Christian kisses on an 'eathen idol's foot," a "bloomin' idol made o' mud," expresses the ignoranceand, it has often been said, the racist attitudesof the British soldier in foreign lands. The speaker, however, "sick o' wastin' leather on these gritty pavin'-stones, / An' the blasted Henglish drizzle [that] wakes the fever in my bones,'' has "a neater, sweeter maiden in a cleaner, greener land! / On the road to Mandalay." There, the Ten Commandments do not exist, he reminds himself: the romantic lure of a more primitive world free of industrialism and puritan morality propels the speaker's desire to return.
In 1897, for Victoria's celebration of her sixtieth year as queen, Kipling composed his famous "Recessional" (following the form of a hymn sung when the clergy and choir retire from the chancel to the vestry after services), which cautions Britons against pride in imperialistic power:
God of our fathers, known of old,
   Lord of our far-flung battle-line,
Beneath whose awful Hand we hold
   Dominion over palm and pine. . . .
Allusions to Nineveh and Tyre, ancient cities no longer standing, provide a warning that the Empire itself could meet a similar fate, a possibility that haunted late-nineteenth-century Victorians:
Lo, all our pomp of yesterday
    Is one with Nineveh and Tyre!
Judge of the Nations, spare us yet,
Lest we forgetlest we forget!
The poem's deflation of British complacency in imperialist achievements grows in intensity as four stanzas end with the foreboding refrain "Lest we forget," the final stanza ending: "Thy mercy on Thy People, Lord!"a curious conclusion to a poem celebrating the queen's Diamond Jubilee.
At the same time, Kipling's vision of empire includes notions of self-imposed responsibility and of noble endeavors that test national character. "The White Man's Burden," written after the American occupation of the Philippines during the Spanish-American War (1898), and whose message soon became a basic premise of Western imperialism,
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