I was ‘up in the back blocks’
of Victoria when I lighted upon some stray copies
of the weekly edition of the ‘Melbourne Argus,’
and became aware of the fact that we had amongst us
a new teller of stories, with a voice and a physiognomy
of his own. The ‘Argus’ had copied
from some journal in far-away India a poem and a story,
each unsigned, and each bearing evidence of the same
hand. A year later I came back to England, and
found everybody talking about ‘The Man from Nowhere,’
who had just taken London by storm. Rudyard Kipling’s
best work was not as yet before us, but there was
no room for doubt as to the newcomer’s quality,
and the only question possible was as to whether he
had come to stay. That inquiry has now been satisfactorily
answered. The new man of half a dozen years ago
is one of England’s properties, and not the one
of which she is least proud. About midway in
his brief and brilliant career, counting from his
emergence until now, people began to be afraid that
he had emptied his sack. Partly because he had
lost the spell of novelty, and partly because he did
too much to be always at his best, there came a time
when we thought we saw him sinking to a place with
the ruck.
Sudden popularity carries with it
many grave dangers, but the gravest of all is the
temptation to produce careless and unripe work.
To this temptation the new man succumbed, but only
for awhile. Like the candid friend of Lady Clara
Vere de Vere, he saw the snare, and he retired.
But at the time when, instead of handing out the bread
of life in generous slices, he took to giving us the
sweepings of the basket I wrote a set of verses, which
I called ‘The Ballad of the Rudyard Kipling.’
I never printed it, because by the time it was fairly
written.
Kipling’s work had not merely
gone back to its first quality, but seemed brighter
and finer than before, and the poor thing, such as
it was, was in the nature of a satire. I venture
to write down the opening verses here, since they
express the feeling with which at least one writer
of English fiction hailed his first appearance.
I
Oh, we be master mariners that sail the snorting
seas,
Right red-plucked mariners that dare the peril
of the storm
But we be old and worn and cold, and far from
rest and ease,
And only love and brotherhood can keep our tired
hearts warm.
II
We were a noble company in days not long gone
by,
And mighty craft our elders sailed to every
earthly shore.
Men of worship, and dauntless soul, that feared
nor sea nor sky;
But God’s hand stilled the valiant hearts,
and the masters sail no more.
III
And for awhile, though we be brave and handy
of our trade,
We sailed no master-galleon, but wrought in
cockboats all,
Slight craft and manned with a single hand;
yet many a trip we made,
Though we but crept from port to port with cargoes
scant and small.
IV
But on a day of wonder came ashining on the
deep,
A royal Splendour, proud with sail, and generous
roar of guns;
She passed us, and we gaped and stared.
Her lofty bows were steep,
And deep she rode the waters deep with a weight
of countless tons.
V
Her rig was strange, her name unknown, she came
we knew not whence,
But on the flag at her peak we read ‘The
Drums of the Fore and Aft.’
And-I speak for one-my
breath came thick and my pulse beat hard and tense,
And we cheered with tears of splendid joy at
sight of the splendid craft.
VI
She swept us by; her master came and spoke us
from the side;
We knew our elder, though his beard was scarce
yet fully grown;
She spanked for home through churning foam with
favouring wind and tide,
And while we hailed like mad he sailed, a King,
to take his own.
Some men are born rich, and some are
born lucky, and some are born both to luck and riches.
Kipling is one of the last. Nature endowed him
with uncommon qualities, and circumstances sent him
into the sphere in which those qualities could be
most fortunately exercised. It seems strange
that the great store of treasure which he opened to
us should have been unhandled and unknown so long.
His Indian pictures came like a revelation. It
is always so when a man of real genius dawns upon the
world. It was so when Scott showed men and women
the jewelled mines of romance which lay in the highways
and byways of homely Scotland. It was so when
Dickens bared the Cockney hearth to the sight of all
men. Meg Merrilies, and Rob Roy, and Edie Ochiltree
were all there-the wild, the romantic,
the humorous were at the doors of millions of men before
Scott saw them. In London, in the early days of
Dickens, there were hordes of capable writers eager
for something new. Not one of them saw Bob Cratchit,
or Fagin, or the Marchioness until Dickens saw them.
So, in India, the British Tommy had lived for many
a year, and the jungle beasts were there, and Government
House and its society were there, and capable men
went up and down the land, sensible of its charm, its
wonder, its remoteness from themselves, and yet not
discerning truly. At last, when a thousand feet
have trodden upon a thing of inestimable price, there
comes along a newspaper man, doing the driest kind
of hackwork, bound to a drudgery as stale and dreary
as any in life, and he sees what no man has ever seen
before him, though it has been plain in view for years
and years. Through scorn and discouragement and
contumely he polishes his treasure, in painful hours
snatched from distasteful labour, and at last he brings
it where it can be seen and known for what it is.
I learn, on the very best authority,
that Mr. Kipling regards his early and unrecognised
days in India with much kindlier eyes than this
would seem to indicate. It may be thought
that, knowing this, I should amend or delete the passage.
I let it stand, however, with this note as a qualification,
because I think it possible that he, like the rest
of us, looks on the past through tinted spectacles.
It is only genius which owns the seeing
eye. There are in Great Britain to-day a dozen
writers of fine faculty, trained to observe, trained
to give to observation its fullest artistic result;
and they are all panting for something new. The
something new is under their noses. They see
it and touch it every day. If I could find it,
my name in a year would sail over the seas, and I
should be a great personage. But I shall not
find it. None of the men who are now known will
find it. It is always the unknown man who makes
that sort of discovery. He will come in time,
and when he comes we shall wonder and admire, and say:
’How new! How true!’ Why, in that
very matter of Tommy Atkins, whose manifold portraits
have done as much as anything to endear Kipling to
the English people-it is known to many
that in my own foolish youth I enlisted in the Army.
I lived with Tommy. I fought and chaffed and drank
and drilled and marched, and went ‘up tahn’
with him, and did pack drill, and had C.B. with him.
I turned novel-writer afterwards, and never so much
as dreamt of giving Tommy a place in my pages.
Then comes Kipling, not knowing him one-half as well
in one way, and knowing him a thousand times better
in another way, and makes a noble and beautiful and
merited reputation out of him; shows the man inside
the military toggery, and makes us laugh and cry,
and exult with feeling. There was a man in New
South Wales-a shepherd-who went
raving mad when he learnt that the heavy black dust
which spoilt his pasture was tin, and that he had waked
and slept for years without discovering the gigantic
fortune which was all about him. I will not go
mad, if I can help it, but I do think it rather hard
lines on me that I hadn’t the simple genius to
see what lay in Tommy.
A good deal has been said of the occasional
coarseness of Kipling’s pages. There are
readers who find it offensive, and they have every
right to the expression of their feelings. I confess
to having been startled once or twice, but never in
a wholly disagreeable fashion-never as
‘Jude the Obscure’ startled. Poor
Captain Mayne Reid, who is still beloved by here and
there a schoolboy, wrote a preface to one of his books-I
think ‘The Rifle Rangers,’ but it is years
on years since I saw it-in order to put
forth his defence for the introduction of an occasional
oath or impious expletive in the conversation of his
men of the prairies. He pleaded necessity.
It was impossible to portray his men without it.
And he argued that an oath does not soil the mind
‘like the clinging immorality of an unchaste
episode.’ The majority of Englishmen will
agree with the gallant Captain. Kipling is rough
at times, and daring, but he is always clean and honest.
There are no hermaphroditic cravings after sexual
excitement in him. He is too much of a man to
care for that kind of thing.
What a benefactor an honest laughter-maker
is! Since Dickens there has been nobody to fill
our lungs like Kipling. Is it not better that
the public should have ‘My Lord the Elephant’
and ‘Brugglesmith’ to laugh outright at
than that they should be feebly sniggering over the
jest-books begotten on English Dulness by Yankee humour,
as they were eight or nine years ago? That jugful
of Cockney sky-blue, with a feeble dash of Mark Twain
in it, which was called ‘Three Men in a Boat’
was not a cheerful tipple for a mental bank-holiday,
but we poor moderns got no better till the coming
of Kipling. We have a right to be grateful to
the man who can make us laugh.
The thing which strikes everybody
who reads Kipling-and who does not?-is
the truly astonishing range of his knowledge of technicalities.
He is very often beyond me altogether, but I presume
him to be accurate, because nobody finds him out,
and that is a thing which specialists are so fond
of doing that we may be sure they would have been about
him in clouds if he had been vulnerable. He gives
one the impression at times of being arrogant about
this special fund of knowledge. But he nowhere
cares to make his modesty conspicuous to the reader,
and his cocksureness is only the obverse of his best
literary virtue. It comes from the very crispness
and definiteness with which he sees things. There
are no clouds about the edges of his perceptions.
They are all clear and nette, Things observed
by such a man dogmatise to the mind, and it is natural
that he should dogmatise as to what he sees with such
apparent precision and completeness.
A recent writer, anonymous, but speaking
from a respectable vehicle as platform, has told us
that the short story is the highest form into which
any expression of the art of fiction can be cast.
This to me looks very like nonsense. I do not
know any short story which can take rank with ‘Pere
Goriot,’ or ‘Vanity Fair,’ or ‘David
Copper-field.’ The short story has charms
of its own, and makes demands of its own. What
those demands are only the writers who have subjected
themselves to its tyranny can know. The ordinary
man who tries this form of art finds early that he
is emptying his mental pockets. Kipling’s
riches in this respect have looked as if they were
without end, and no man before him has paid away so
much. But it has to be remembered here that in
many examples of his power in this way he has been
purely episodic, and the discovery or creation of
an episode is a much simpler thing than the discovery
or creation of a story proper, which is a collection
of episodes, arranged in close sequence, and leading
to a catastrophe, tragic or comic, as the theme may
determine.
In estimating the value of any writer’s
work you must take his range into consideration.
Kipling stretches, in emotion, from deep seriousness
to exuberant laughter; and his grasp of character is
quite firm and sure, whether he deal with Mrs. Hawksbee
or with Dinah Shadd; with a field officer or with
Mulvaney, Ortheris, and Learoyd; with the Inspector
of Forests or with Mowgli. He knows the ways of
thinking of them all, and he knows the tricks of speech
of all, and the outer garniture and daily habitudes
of all. His mind seems furnished with an instantaneous
camera and a phonographic recorder in combination;
and keeping guard over this rare mental mechanism
is a spirit of catholic affection and understanding.
Finally, he is an explorer, one of
the original discoverers, one of the men who open
new regions to our view. A revelation has waited
for him. He is as much the master of his English
compeers in originality as Stevenson was their master
in finished craftsmanship.