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...Heavy Pencil. But in this running rearguard action the editor gathered about him a corps of rising young writers, many of whom came to be known as "Henley's Young Men." Rudyard Kipling's earliest, most virile poems, Barrack Room Ballads, were printed first by Henley-as were the stories of the Polish emigrant, Joseph Conrad, J. M. Barrie and Robert Louis Stevenson, sections of Thomas Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbervilles, H. G. Wells's The Time Machine, the early lyrics of William Butler Yeats-and even the formal Henry James...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Unbowed Head | 10/15/1945 | See Source »

...Rudyard Kipling); of a heart attack; in Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire. In general agreement with Queen Mary on both morals and hats, she kept a firm, wifely hand in her husband's career (gossip credited her with much influence in forcing the abdication of Edward VIII...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Jul. 2, 1945 | 7/2/1945 | See Source »

Since 1936 talented Angela Thirkeil, who is. as stylistically languid as her Pre-Raphaelite grandfather Edward Burne-Jones and as staunchly British as her cousins Stanley Baldwin and the late Rudyard Kipling, has made hay in the fictitious fields of Barsetshire - the mythical English region created by Victorian Novel ist Anthony Trollope. In a series of novels (including the best-selling The Brandons and Northbridge Rectory}, Author Thirkell has peopled Barsetshire with 20th-Century "descendants" of Trollope's squires, rural deans, bluebloods, housemaids and self-made men - all of whom breathe an air of whimsy, nostalgia and laconic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Perfectly Beastly Snobs | 1/15/1945 | See Source »

...fondest childhood memories was of meeting Rudyard Kipling, who was a friend of her father and who had vacationed near her home in Brattlebore, Vermont. After coming to Harvard, she lived a quiet life in Boston, devoting her major interest to the University...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LATE ADMISSIONS' SECRETARY SERVED UNIVERSITY 42 YEARS | 8/1/1944 | See Source »

Ever since he started to publish rhymes (circa 1885), Rudyard Kipling has been one of the world's most read and most neglected poets. Americans and Britons who would not be found dead with a book of poems in their pockets read Kipling-worse, they memorized whole stanzas. A graduating class in a U.S. college which did not name Kipling's If- as its favorite poem might be presumed to have something wrong with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Restoration | 10/25/1943 | See Source »

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