Debits and Credits (Kipling)

Debits and Credits is a collection of fourteen stories, nineteen poems and two scenes from a play[1] by Rudyard Kipling. The collection was first published in 1926. Four of the poems are translations of odes by Horace. The copyright in the United States expires in 2020.[2]

Contents

Contents

Stories

The story of Adam and Eve retold in the style of a Muslim fable
Weekend sailors turned naval officers discuss their patrolling of the coast over dinner
An account of the generous hospitality of a Masonic Lodge in wartime
A tale of school life, in which Stalky & Co discover Uncle Remus and outrage a new master
An old Sussex woman talks about the love of her life and the price she paid for loving him
An still-bewildered old soldier recalls how he came to join a 'secret society' of Jane Austen admirers and gives his own unique take on her oeuvre
A stranded motorist meets an exiled American who explains his passionate objection to Prohibition
A story about an uncannily intelligent bull with a flair for the bullfight
After the war, a soldier reveals the true cause of his "shell-shock"
A tale of school life, in which Stalky & Co bait their English master with the Curiosities of Literature and the Baconian theory
An Australian soldier avenges his friend by waging war on the home front
A fantasy in which St Peter and the administrators of Heaven struggle to cope with the surge of souls from the war
In a mediaeval abbey, an artist shows some doctors an early microscope, which provokes debate
A story about respectability and mother-love

Poems

Play Fragments

Online texts

References

External links