| Notes from
The Kipling Society
www.kipling.org.uk |
"The Man who
would be King"
Notes on the text
These notes, by John McGivering, are
partly new, and partly based on the ORG. We are
indebted to Alastair Wilson for some technical
details, and to George Kieffer for advice on matters
Masonic. The page and line numbers below refer to
the Macmillan (London) Standard Edition of Wee
Willie Winkie and Other Stories, as published and
frequently reprinted between 1899 and 1950.
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[April 22 2007]
[Title] (This title has a echo of
O’Shaughnessy’s Ode “We are the Music-Makers” about it, but
we have a feeling that it rings another bell somewhere and
suggestions would be appreciated: Ed.)
One man with a dream, at pleasure.
Shall go forth and conquer a crown;
And three with a new song’s measure
Can trample a kingdom down. (Arthur William Edgar
O’Shaughnessy 1844–1881)
[Heading] Brother to a Prince and fellow to a beggar if
he be found worthy an echo of the last verse of the
Masonic verse
“Banquet Night”.
[Page 200, line 1] The Law 'This
refers to the Masonic Law, which lays down rules for the
conduct of life by teaching the freemason morality,
equality, and justness and uprightness of life and actions.'
[G.K.]
[Page 200, line 13] Mhow town and cantonment, Indore
State, Central India.
Ajmir capital of Rajputana Province – see Letters
of Marque in From Sea to Sea, volume I page 42.
[Page 200, line 13] upon the road to Mhow from Ajmir
This is the line on which Kipling travelled from Ajmir to
Chitor in order to reach Udaipur, described in Letters of
Marque No.VI, which was written shortly before "The Man
who Would be King".
[Page 200, line 19] Eurasian people of mixed race,
usually an Indian mother and an European father. See
“His Chance in Life” (Plain Tales from the Hills)
and “Among the Railway Folk” (From Sea to Sea, vol
II).
[Page 200, line 20] Loafer discussed in From Sea
to Sea, vol. I, pp. 118 – 9.
[Page 202, line 1] resume touch with the Treasury The
ORG maintains that Kipling had no sense of money and
it was just as likely he would find himself penniless when
away from home; in later years his wife was in charge of his
finances, and very successfully, too. However, here - to
support the story-line - he has to explain why the Narrator
is travelling in the acute discomfort of Intermediate Class.
[Page 202, line 21] Marwar Junction ... Jodhpore see
“Letters of Marque", pp. 110 ff.
[Page 202, line 29] the Backwoodsman a nickname for
The Pioneer which Kipling represented – a stratagem
often used by blackmailers.
[Page 203, lines 14-18] going to the West ... From the
East ... on the Square ... for the sake of my Mother
'These words come from the Lodge ritual
of the Third Degree, where a Mason is said to be coming from
the East and directing his course to the West, looking for
the lost secrets of a Master Mason, which were lost with the
death of Hiram Abiff. The latter, one of the three Grand
Masters, was said to be a widow’s son and all Masons are
therefore considered to be the sons of a widow, which serves
to explain the reference to ‘Mother’. See also the poem "The
Widow at Windsor." ' [G.K.]
[Page 204, line 6 and line 15] Degumber ... Chortumna
These are disguised names for two notorious rajahas of the
time.
[Page 204, line 29] barouches four-wheeled
horse-drawn carriages to seat four people and a driver.
[Page 205, line 4] Harun-al-Raschid (763–809) Caliph
of Baghdad and hero of the stories of the Arabian Nights. He
plays a prominent part in “Railway Reform in Great Britain”
(Sussex Edition, vol XXX and reprinted in KJ 310/19)
See also “Letters of Marque” (From Sea to Sea, vol.
I, page 195)
[Page 205, line 8] Politicals British military
officers or diplomats accredited to Rajahs and other Indian
rulers as 'Agents' or 'Residents' in an endeavour to
moderate their behaviour and assist them to adhere to
government policy - Colonel Nolan holds such a post in
The Naulahka [See David Cannadine, Ornamentalism -
How the British saw their Empire, Allen Lane, The
Penguin Press, 2001.]
[Page 205, line 18] Jodhpore see “Letters of Marque”
pp. 108 ff. (From Sea to Sea, vol. I) for the
author’s visit
[Page 206, line 18] little rat-trap states some
Rajahs did not administer their states as well as could be
wished – see “Namgay Doola” (Life’s Handicap) and
The Naulahka.
[Page 206, line 30] Zenana-mission ladies Persian
zanana from zan, meaning ‘woman’; these were the
private apartments where the women were kept in seclusion (purdah).
Western missionaries often endeavoured to improve their
conditions. [see the Old Lady of Kulu in Chapter 4 of Kim
and Chapter 9 of The Naulahka].
[Page 207, line 3] Seniority versus Selection a
perennial subject of discussion which has not been resolved
to this day.
[Page 207, line 21] Grand Trunk Road See the notes on
Kim page 64.
[Page 207, line 24] telephone in use in India at an
early date.
[Page 207, line 27] Mister Gladstone William Ewart
Gladstone (1809–1898) a Liberal Prime Minister of the United
Kingdom and so detested by Kipling, who calls him “Mister”
in a slighting manner, rather as the boys in the 'Stalky'
story
“The United Idolaters” called Brownell, the unpleasant
temporary master.
[Page 207, line 31] Modred’s shield blank, as he had
not done a noble deed to earn a device: see Tennyson’s
Idylls of the King and Malory’s Morte d’Arthur.
[Page 208, line 9] prickly-heat Lichen Tropicus
- an intensely uncomfortable disorder of the sweat-glands
common in hot countries. See Dr Gillian Sheehan's
note on the subject.
[Page 208, line 12] Khuda Janta Khan an invented name
which translates as 'God Knows Town'.
[Page 208, line 27] the dark half of the moon it is
not clear if this refers to the other side of the moon which
is not visible from earth, or to the interlunation when the
moon is not visible at all. We have a feeling that this has
a Shakespearian ring to it. [Suggestions
will be welcomed: Ed.]
[Page 209, line 16] the loo the hot dry wind of the
tropics.
[Page 209, line 24] night-jars 'Goatsuckers', or
nighthawks, birds of the family Caprimugidæ with a
curious cry like a stone skimming over ice.
[Page 210, line 30] Contrack Contract, see page 215
for a copy of it.
[Page 211, line 7] Brother Freemasons so address each
other.
[Page 212, line 20] two strong men an echo of
Kipling’s
“Ballad of East and West” (1889)
When two strong men stand face to
face,
though they come from the ends of the earth !
[Page 212, line 20] Sar-a-whack Sir James Brooke
(1803–1868) served in the army of the East India Company,
assisted the Sultan of Brunei to reduce the warring tribes
of Sarawak and was created Rajah of the province in 1841.
Also, perhaps, a pun on sarwat, meaning “wealth”, but
the language has not yet been traced.
[Page 212, line 21] Kafiristan a territory of
some five thousand square miles on the south slope of the
Hindu Kush mountains between Afghanistan and Kashmir, and of
strategic importance as an outpost of the Indian frontier,
commanding as it does the passes of the Hindu Kush. The
country was subdued by the Emir of Afghanistan in 1895-6 and
converted to Islam; 'Kafir' is a Mohammedan word for
infidel. [Harmsworth] See also our notes on the heading of
“His Chance in Life”.
[Page 212, line 22] top right-hand corner of Afghanistan
an approximation as the country was unexplored by Europeans
at the time
[Page 212, line 23] three hundred miles from Peshawar
probably less, see the note above.
[Page 213, line 11] no Englishman has been through it
Kipling later met Robertson, author of Kafirs and
Kafiristan, 1896. (
Lycett, p. 290)
[Page 213, line 28] volume INF-KAN Volume XIII of the
9th Edition of The Encyclopædia Britannica contains
an article on Kafiristan by Colonel Sir Henry Yule
(1820–1889) which supplied most of Kipling’s references and
local colour. [Yule and Arthur Coke Burnell (1840–1882), are
joint compilers of the invaluable
Hobson-Jobson glossary of Anglo-Indian words and
phrases.]
[Page 213, line 32] Roberts’ army In the Second
Afghan war of 1878-1880 the then
Major-General Roberts took the Kurram Valley and Kabul
and then made the famous march to Kandahar. There is a
portrait of him in
Martin Fido's illustrated biography. [See also Peter
Hopkirk, The Great Game (O.U.P., 1990) (pp. 400 ff.)]
[Page 213, line 33] Jagdalak about forty miles east
of Kabul
[Page 214, line 1] Laghmann territory a District on
the north side of the Kabul River opposite Jelalabad.
[Page 214, line 5] Wood ... Sources of the Oxus
Captain John Wood (1811–1871) A Journey to the Source of
the Oxus with an Essay on the Geography of the Valley of the
Oxus by Colonel Sir Henry Yule, 1841 and 1872. [See the
note to page 213 line 28 above]
[Page 214, line 10] Ashang (Alishang on old maps) to
the north of the Laghmann territory.
[Page 214, line 15] United Services’ Institute The
Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security
Studies, formed in 1831 and at one time housed in the
Banqueting House in Whitehall, in London. (It is now now (in
2004) next door, with the Welsh Office on the other side.)
George Cottar was going to a lecture there but changed his
mind when he met Miriam in “The Brushwood Boy” (The Day’s
Work). There was a local U.S.I. in Simla where lectures
and examinations on military subjects were held and
Occasional Papers published.
[Page 214, line 16] Bellew Surgeon-General Henry
Walter Bellew (1834–1892) author of several works, including
Our Punjab frontier, being a concise account of the
various tribes… and brief remarks on Afghanistan (1868)
which is probably the book in question,
[Page 214, line 19] related to us English legend has
it that there was a colony of descendants of soldiers from
the army of Alexander the Great (356–323 B.C.) at Charikar,
fifty miles North of Kabul, and Sir J. Rawlinson said he had
heard of white natives and seen a girl in Kabul with golden
hair down to her feet. The Encyclopaedia Brittanica
quotes Bellew’s description of a Kafir officer as hardly to
be distinguished from an Englishman and concludes that
fairness was a general characteristic. [See the note below
at page 230, line 14.]
[Page 214, line 20] Raverty Major Henry George
Raverty (1825–1906) published various works, including
Notes on Afghanistan and Baluchistan in four parts,
1881–1888.
[Page 214, line 27] the Serai the Kumharsen Serai -
buildings round a central yard with accommodation for men,
animals and goods, similar to the Kashmir Serai at Lahore.
[See Kim page 24.]
[Page 215, line 27] There was no need for the last
article i.e. 'if one of us gets into
trouble the other will stay by him'. The reason Carnehan
consider this article of the contract superfluous is that
masons are pledged to help each other. [G.K.]
[Page 216, line 16] Balkh an ancient town and capital
of the province of the same name, a centre of trade between
India and Central Asia.
[Page 216, line 17] Bokhara at one time a vassal
state of Russia with the River Oxus as one boundary. Mahbub
Ali wears a belt from there in Kim (page 24).
[Page 216, line 18] draw eye-teeth The canines, in
the upper and lower jaws, just below the eyes, are
proverbially difficult to extract; thus this expression
means 'to drive a hard bargain' or 'take the conceit out of
a person'.
[Page 216, line 33] Amir Abdur Rahman, King of
Afghanistan who appears in “The Emir’s Homily” (Life’s
Handicap). [There is a cartoon of him in Hopkirk’s
The Great Game (O.U.P. 1990) and he appears in a group
with the Duke of Connaught at p. 46 of
Fido.] See also
“Her Majesty’s Servants” (The Jungle Book), and
for a report on the meeting with the Emir,
Pinney’s Kipling’s India (pp. 77ff.) Also
“The Ballad of the King’s Jest, and
“The Ballad of the King’s Mercy”.
[Page 217, line 4] Usbeg a Central Asian people –
their language belongs to the Tuekic branch of the Altaic
family.
[Page 217, line 4] Hindi a language of the
Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family now
(2004) used by some 30% of people in Northern India.
[Page 217, line 7] Shinwaris tribesmen from South of
the Khyber Pass which leads from Pakistan into Afghanistan.
[Page 217, line 9] Eusufzai tribesmen from North of
Peshawar.
[Page 217, line 9] Rajputana The Indian territory
bordered by the Punjab on the North, the Bombay Presidency,
and the United Provinces.
[Page 217, line 15] Roum Turkey or perhaps its
ancient capital Constantinople, which is now called
Istanbul.
[Page 217, line 18] Pir Khan a political and
religious leader; Pir is a descendant of a saint, and
Khan the leader of a tribe.
[Page 217, line 20] Protected of God a madman.
[Page 217, line 25] King of the Roos the Czar of
Russia.
[Page 217, line 31] Huzrut Arabic Huzur
– The Presence - a respectful form of address.
[Page 218, line 3] Hazar Get ready.
[Page 218, line 25] Martini a Martini–Henry rifle
used in the British Army – see the notes to
“His Chance in Life” (82/14) and
“The Taking of Lungtungpen” (119/12) (Plain Tales
from the Hills} The weight was 8¾ pounds (ORG).
[Page 219, line 3] the Khaiber the famous Pass, some
thirty-three miles long, between Afghanistan and India used
by the conquerors of India (except Alexander and the
British) and always strongly guarded against the
ever-present threat of a Russian invasion. Kipling was there
on one occasion and a tribesman took a shot at him –
fortunately, he missed ! (Something of Myself, p.44);
but see
Lycett (p.105) who says it was a volley of stones from a
young boy who did not like the look of him. The Khaiber (or
'Khyber') Pass is mentioned in many of the Indian stories
particularly in “The Man who Was” (Life’s Handicap)
and Kim.
[Page 219, line 10] Half my Kingdom an echo of
Herod’s promise to Salome in Mark 6, 23:
Whatever thou shalt ask of me, I will give it thee, unto the
half of my kingdom. Also the classic fairy-tale
reward for the prince who rescues the princess, kills the
dragon etc.
[Page 219, line 12] a small charm compass
'The compasses are an emblem of
freemasonry, which symbolise the limitations of human
desires and ambitions and reminds the freemason of God’s
unerring justice. The irony of trading Martini-Henry rifles
for a Masonic emblem of this nature is palpable.' [G.K.]
[Page 219. line 33] H.H. His Highness.
[Page 221, line 5] turned up the lamp it would be a
paraffin (kerosene) lamp, with a cotton wick moved up and
down by turning a screw which increased or decreased the
light. Two are shown on the back cover of Mrs. Hauksbee
Steps Out, ed. John Whitehead [Hearthstone Publications
1998]
[Page 222, line 14] don’t distrack me do not distract
me.
[Page 224, line 27] tremenjus tremendous
[Page 225, line 1] odd and even a gambling game.
[Page 225, line 6] fair men … with yellow hair see
note to page 214, line 19 above.
[Page 225, line 28] Imbra Imbra is their chief god.
[Hobson-Jobson]
[Page 225, line 33] jim-jams usually slang for
delirium tremens (a disorder of the brain brought about
by excessive alcohol), but here used for the idols even
though the men he addressed did not understand English.
[Page 226, line 10] rope bridges flimsy and dangerous
constructions across deep gorges.
[Page 227, line 9] Go and dig the land and be fruitful
and multiply echoes of Genesis 1, 28:
Be fruitful and multiply, and replenish the earth...
and Genesis 3, 23: The LORD GOD sent him
forth to till the ground…
[Page 227, line 24] form fours and advance in line
drill formations – see “The Magic Square” in A Book of
Words.
[Page 227, line 33] blooded a custom of the
hunting-field when a newcomer – usually a child – is as it
were “ christened” with blood from a dead fox. It may well
be the folk-memory of sacrifices in pre-Christian times.
[Page 228, line 10] matchlocks an early form of
musket with a burning fuze that ignites the gunpowder when
the trigger is pulled. The flint-lock is the next major
improvement. [between the matchlock
and the flintlock, there came the wheel-lock, though many
weapons went straight from the match to the flint; A.W.]
See the notes to
“His Chance in Life” (82/14).
[Page 228, line 17] the brown to fire into the middle
of a flock of birds or other creatures.
[Page 228, line 18] wings one of them shoots him in
an arm or other non-fatal part of the body
[Page 228, line 31] Volunteers the predecessors of
the Territorial Army (the volunteer auxiliary force for the
British Army) sometimes not very highly trained.
[Page 229, line 3] Occupy till I come see Luke 19,13:
And he called his ten servants ... and
said unto them Occupy till I come.
[Page 230, line 14] the son of Alexander by Queen
Semarimis Alexander the Great; see the note to page 214
line 19 above. Legend had it that she was a queen of Assyria
who built Babylon and conquered Egypt and Libya, but failed
to conquer India. This is, however, an unlikely story as she
flourished about 800 B.C. while Alexander was born in 356
B.C.
[Page 230, line 18] footy trifling. This is
pronounced footy - because the derivation is from
footling.
[Page 230, line 22] Shu this and other places
mentioned by Carnehan are imaginary.
[Page 230, line 23] suet in mutton not suet, but the
white fat in cold mutton which appears like veins in marble.
[Page 230, line 24] turquoise a mineral, hydrous
phosphate of aluminium and copper, opaque and blue–green, it
is used as a gem.
[Pagr 230, line 25] garnets silicate minerals used as
semi-precious stones, usually pink to deep red, and
abrasives.
[Page 230, line 26] amber fossilised gum from
prehistoric coniferous trees, usually found on the shores of
the Baltic, coloured red or yellow, used in jewellery.
[Page 231, line 1] The Craft Freemasonry. The two men
were partly successful in ruling the country as if it were a
Lodge of Freemasons. 'Carnehan goes to
give the Third Degree Grip to Billy Fish. He must therefore
have been a Master Mason or he would not have known the
grip. It is rather the natives who acquired freemasonry from
Alexander the Great – as is implied – but who never
progressed beyond the Second Degree, that of a Fellow Craft.
The ‘Word’ means the password of the degree.' [G.K.]
[Page 231, line 5] Mach A railway-station on the
Bolan Pass which leads to Quetta. They knew a man who looked
like 'Billy Fish' when they were working on the construction
of this line.
[Page 231, line 8] the Grip a Masonic handshake which
enables members to recognise one another. Each rank has a
characteristic Grip.
[Page 231, line 15] they’ve cut the marks on the rocks
'These are the Masonic marks, such as
square and compasses, level etc. Interestingly in the
obligation of the First Degree a candidate Freemason
promises never to carve these symbols anywhere.' [G.K.]
[Page 231, line 23] “It’s against all the law … holding a
Lodge without warrant from any one”
'A Lodge requires a warrant issued by a Grand Lodge to be
regular and properly constituted. It specifies the number of
the Lodge in the Register and when and where it meets.
Dispensations are granted for changes of venue or date. Here
Dravot assumes the powers of a Grand Master who presides
over a Grand Lodge. In India Lodges came under the
jurisdiction of the United Grand Lodge of England and were
organised under District Grand Masters.' [G.K.]
[Page 231, line 27] a four-wheeled bogie on a down grade
A curious Americanism which Kipling may have picked up
incorrectly from Mrs. Hill; we regard a bogie as a four
wheeled truck. Kipling seems to be referring to the complete
vehicle which would, in fact, be an eight-wheeler. This is
discussed in the
notes to “.007” (page 248, line 20) (The Day’s Work)
We would call a 'down grade' a descending gradient or an
incline. See also Letters of Travel and From Sea
to Sea.
[Page 232, line 1] aprons part of the ornamental
dress of Masons in Lodge.
[Page 232, line 2] levee (levée) an assembly and
Reception by the Sovereign, a Viceroy or Governor. See the
note to “His Chance in Life” page 77 line 1 (Plain
Tales from the Hills).
[Page 232, line 11] black pavement with white squares
the usual pattern of floors in a Masonic Lodge.
[Page 232, line 16] Past Grand-Masters
'The ‘Past Grand-Masters’ are Solomon
King of Israel, Hiram King of Tyre and Hiram Abiff. Dravot
or Carnehan have never been Masters of a Lodge, as opposed
to Master Masons, or even held more junior offices.
Alexander the Great was originally considered a Mason until
demoted by The Rev James Anderson who wrote the first and
fundamental Constitutions of freemasonry in 1723.' [G.K.]
[Page 232, line 25] Bazar-master a non-commissioned
officer in charge of the Bazar or native quarter with
shops.
[Page 232, line 26] Mhow a military station near
Indore, in Central India.
[Page 232, line 30] fudge the Ritual improvise as
they did not know the correct procedure.
[Page 233, line 10] the Master’s Mark
'This denotes the markings on the apron
of the Master of a Lodge which are three symbols in the
shape of an inverted tau, the Greek letter T, often
considered a religious symbol. The markings of masons below
the rank of Masters are turquoise rosettes. The discovery of
lost symbols or marks is important in Masonic symbolism,
particularly in Mark Masonry of which Kipling was a member.'
[G.K.]
[Page 233, line 15] Mark that no one could understand as
'This must refer to the apron of a
Master of a Lodge. (see above).' [G.K.]
[Page 233, lines 18–22] By virtue of the authority…etc
'Only the words By virtue of the
authority vested in me are taken from Masonic ritual.
Any Master, even a Grand Master, has to be properly
installed by his predecessor and does not have the authority
to appoint himself.' [G.K.]
[Page 233, line 24] Senior Warden
'The most senior officer in a Lodge after the Master.'
[G.K.]
[Page 234, line 5] Communication
'A Grand Lodge holds meetings called Communications,
at regular intervals, normally quarterly.' [G.K.]
[Page 235, line 9] Kafuzelum she is the 'Harlot of
Jerusalem'. This was a ribald old song that goes to the tune
of "In Plymouth Town there lived a Maid / And she was
mistress of her trade". The Archangels’ band plays it when
they lose the game of polo in
“The Maltese Cat” (The Day’s Work).
[Page 235, lines 13-14] Bashkai, Khawak See the note
on page 213 line 28 above.
[Page 235, line 17] Ghorband a District in Parwan
Province some fifty miles north of Kabul, where rifles were
made for the Emir: they were not as valuable as weapons
stolen from the British, as the artificers did not know how
to harden the head of the bolt. See
“The Man who Was” (Life’s Handicap)
[Page 235, line 20] Herati men from Herat, a city
some 400 miles west of Kabul.
[Page 235, line 27] Jezails long, heavy Afghan
muskets made at a factory on the Peshawar road to Kohat. See
the poem
“Arithmetic on the Frontier”.
[Page 236, line 3] cork-screwed, hand-made guns
barrels not true and probably with erratic rifling.
[Page 236, line 9] niggers American slang for black
people generally, now offensive, and not used; sometimes
used in the past by Eurasians to refer to lower caste
Indians.
[Page 236, line 12] sit on chairs Indians of this
social level usually squatted on the ground or on
charpoys (beds).
[Page 236, line 13] the Lost Tribes Ten tribes
from northern Palestine who were carried into captivity in
about 720 B.C. and never heard of again. The theory that the
British are descended from them has been put forward but is
not based on any verifiable evidence. See also
“The Propagation of Knowledge” [page 284 line 14] and
“Sea Constables” [page 43 line 14] in Debits and
Credits.
[Page 236, line 21] Russia's right flank when she tries
for India An expansionist Tsarist Russia had been
extending her empire southwards into central Asia during the
mid-19th century, and the British were very conscious that
she might have aggressive intentions towards British India.
'The Great Game' was the British intelligence campaign to
detect Russian moves in the north-west, and foil them. This
is reflected in a number of Kipling's stories, including
Kim, where Kim and Hurree deal with a pair of Russian
agents who are intriguing with Himalayan native states, and
"The Man who Was", in Life's Handicap in which
Dirkovitch is clearly a Russian agent, and the White Hussars
are in no doubt that they may need to give his Cossacks a
warm welcome if they become a military threat; at the end of
the story a Hussar officer hums the refrain from a
'recent Simla burlesque':
I'm sorry for Mister Bluebeard,
I'm sorry to cause him pain;
But a terrible spree there's sure to be
When he comes back again.
Incidentally, unless Kipling has another pass further to the
east in mind, he appears to put Kafiristan on the wrong side
of the Khyber in referring to Russia's
right flank.
[Page 236, line 25] Rajah Brooke see the note to page
212 line 20 above.
[Page 236, line 29] Segowli (Segauli) 85 miles
north-west of Patna in Bengal.
[Page 236, line 31 ] Tounghoo Jail Taung-ngu in Lower
Burma, 110 miles north of Pegu. Warder Donkin also appears
in the poem
"The Mother Lodge".
[Page 237, line 2] Dispensation
'A 'dispensation' is given by the authority of the Grand
Master to regularise Lodge matters; Dravot dreams that his
Grand Lodge will become regular and recognised by United
Grand Lodge of England in this manner and that he will
become the District Grand Master. (See also the note to page
249 line 25 below) ' [G.K.]
[Page 237, lines 4 & 6] Sniders ... worn smooth
James Snider (1820–1866), was an American inventor who
designed the conversion of the Enfield muzzle-loading rifle
into a breechloader. It was generally issued to the British
infantry, and then the Indian Army from 1867 onwards. (The
muzzle loading Enfield rifles and the greased cartridges had
been a contributory factor in the outbreak of the Indian
Mutiny, referred to a little later in the story. Snider’s
invention was therefore revolutionary as it did not require
the biting off of the twisted end of the greased cartridge.)
[Later, at some time after 1871, the
Indian Army was rearmed with the Martini-Henry rifle, and
its predecessors were destroyed or sold. The rifling, which
imparted a rotary motion to the projectile and kept it
gas-tight, would have been worn, resulting in a shorter
range and lower muzzle-velocity; A.W.]
[Page 238, line14] Ghorband see the note to page 235
line 17 above.
[Page 239, line 17] Mogul Serai (Mughal Serai) –
across the Ganges near Benares, scene of the Queens’ Praying
in “The Incarnation of Krishna Mulvaney” (Life’s
Handicap).
[Page 239, line 22] Dadur Junction There are two
places named Dadar; the one with the railway junction is in
Baluchistan, now in Pakistan, some 60 miles south-east of
Quetta.
[Page 239, line 32] waste their strength on women
Proverbs 31, 3: Give not thy strength
unto women, nor thy ways to that which destroyeth kings.
[Page 240, line 1) For the last time of answering a pun on
"The Form of Solemnization of Matrimony" in The Book of
Common Prayer, the proper form being
This the first (second, or third) time of asking.
ORG also records that it was an Eastern custom for the
question to be asked three times, and that from modesty the
lady would not reply until the last time.
[Page 240, line 10] Am I a dog…..? An echo of 2 Kings
8, 13 ...is thy servant a dog, that he
should do this great thing ? (Kipling later used the
phrase 'Thy Servant a Dog' as the title of a collection of
dog stories.)
[Page 240, line 22] at Home in the United Kingdom.
[Page 241, line 1] daughters of men an echo of
Genesis 6, 2: ...the sons of God saw the
daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them
wives of all which they chose.
[Page 242, line 33] Punch the Italian
Punchinello, the classic puppet play Punch and Judy
about a husband and wife with a baby. He mistreats both of
them and triumphs over all his enemies, being particularly
pleased with himself when he does so. It was probably
introduced into England about 1660 or earlier and is a
dreadful display of violence and bad manners which is still
adored by children to this day.
[ Page 243, line 7] jackass the male donkey, an
animal with a loud bray.
[Page 244 , line 1] Neither God nor Devil, but a man
because he bled when she bit him.
[Page 245, line 24] our Fifty-Seven The uprising in
1857 by some Indian regiments against the British which was
put down after much brutality on both sides, and is referred
to by British historians as "The Indian Mutiny". It is
mentioned in several of the stories, particularly in “The
Bridge-Builders” (The Day’s Work) and “On the City
Wall” in Soldiers Three where one character observes
'... ’57 is a year that no man, black or
white, cares to speak of.'
[Page 247, line 19] punkah-coolies men who pull the
ropes that operate the primitive fans of that era.
[Page 249, line 25] Right Worshipful Brother
'This is the mode of address for a
Provincial or more appropriately in the case of India a
District Grand Master; the Grand Master of UGLE and any
independent Grand Lodge would be addressed as Most
Worshipful Brother.' [G.K.]
[Page 249, line 28] a black horsehair bag this may
well be the bag in which Peachey’s crown came – see page
230, line 28 above.
[Page 249, line 30] the dried withered head see the
Medical Notes by Dr. Gillian Sheehan.
[Page 250, line 4] in his ‘abit as he lived an echo
of Hamlet III, 4, 136 : My father, in his
habit as he liv’d !
[Page 250, line 27 - 28] The Son of Man goes forth to war
/ A golden crown to gain This is based on Hymn 439 (Old)
539 (New) by Bishop Reginald Heber (1783–1826} in Hymns
Ancient and Modern, which has 'kingly' rather than
'golden' in line 2.
[Page 251, line 6] sunstroke See the
Medical Notes by Dr. Gillian Sheehan.
[J. McG.]
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