Debits and Credits (Kipling)

This article is about the literary work. For the bookkeeping concept, see debits and credits.
First edition (publ. Doubleday Page)

Debits and Credits is a collection of fourteen stories, nineteen poems, and two scenes from a play[1] by Rudyard Kipling, a British writer who wrote extensively about British colonialism in India and Burma. In 1907, he became the first Englishman to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature. The collection was first published in 1926 and includes bitter and bleak stories about subjects such as adultery, war, death, disease, and the passage of time as a harbinger of sorrow. Most of the stories in this collection are framed by poems.[2]

Four of the poems that accompany the stories are whimsically presented as translations from the "Bk. V of Odes" by Horace but are actually poems by Kipling imitating the style of the Roman poet.

The copyright in the United States expires in 2020.[3]

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
A 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

  1. Readers' Guide Introduction
  2. "Kipling, 'Jane’s Marriage,' and 'The Janeites'" by James Heldman, Persuasions: A Publication of the Jane Austen Society of North America #10, 1988, pp 44-47
  3. Copyright Renewal R117669

External links

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