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"The Gods of the Copybook Headings" is a poem by Rudyard Kipling, characterized by biographer Sir David Gilmour as one of several "ferocious post-war eruptions" of Kipling's souring sentiment concerning the state of Anglo-European society. [1] It was first published in the Sunday Pictorial of London on 26 October 1919.
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The English folk singer Peter Bellamy was a lover of Kipling's poetry, much of which he believed to have been influenced by English traditional folk forms. He recorded several albums of Kipling's verse set to traditional airs, or to tunes of his own composition written in traditional style. [ 146 ]
Posthumous collections of Kipling's poems include: Rudyard Kipling’s Verse: Definitive Edition. A Choice of Kipling's Verse, edited by T. S. Eliot (Faber and Faber, 1941). Early verse by Rudyard Kipling, 1879–1889 : unpublished, uncollected, and rarely collected poems, Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1986. The Surprising Mr Kipling, edited by ...
In 2013, The Cambridge Edition of the Poems of Rudyard Kipling was published and included 50 previously unpublished poems alongside more than 1300 previously, though often rarely, published poems in a three-volume edition. [1] Many other versions of Kipling's verse have been made. These include
Additionally, several poems were published: Gertrude's Prayer; Dinah in Heaven; Four-Feet; The Totem; The Disciple; The Playmate; Naaman's Song; The Mother's Son; The Coiner; At his Execution; The Threshold; Neighbours; The Expert; The Curé; Song of Seventy Horses; Hymn to Physical Pain; The Penalty; Azrael's Count
Debits and Credits is a 1926 collection of fourteen stories, nineteen poems, and two scenes from a play by Rudyard Kipling, an English writer who wrote extensively about British colonialism in India and Burma. Four of the poems that accompany the stories are whimsically presented as translations from the "Bk.
Having said that, it is more galling having not one but three references or links to him on the same page as a kipling poem; kipling can be somewhat controversial, but there is no doubt as to whether or not he was a complete idiot, and so on that basis if anyone wishes to delete the entire section, please feel free to do so.