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Set in the days of the British Raj, Kipling's finest novel is the exciting and touching tale of an Irish orphan-boy who has lived free in the streets of Lahore before setting out, with a Tibetan Lama, on a double quest. This eventually leads to enrolment in the Indian Secret Service and a thrilling climax in the Himalayas.
Kim, probably Kipling's finest novel, was first published in 1901, but was the result of many years' germination and grew in large part from the author's lovingly-remembered time in India, as a boy and later as a young man beginning a career in journalism.
That first job was in Lahore, where Kipling's father was Curator of the Museum. The young Kipling loved to explore the twilight world of the Lahore slums, absorbing the colour and atmosphere which would later inform the opening chapter of Kim with its affectionate portrayal of the teeming, noisy, exotic city.
Into Lahore comes the dejected but dignified form of the Tibetan lama who is hoping to free himself from the Wheel of Life by finding the River of Immortality. The lama is helped by the charming, curious, lively-minded figure of Kim himself, the Irish orphan boy who thinks of himself as more an Indian than a sahib. From this moment, the novel becomes a picaresque account of Kim's wanderings across the Punjab and into the Himalayas, accompanying first the lama as his chela (disciple) and then as a servant of the British Raj, ostensibly trained as a surveyor but actually groomed for a life playing the Great Game: spying for Colonel Creighton and the Indian Secret Service.
On one level, then, Kim is an adventure story and a very enjoyable one. But the novel transcends its outward form: its two main characters are both on a quest - the lama to find his river, Kim to discover his identity and, perhaps, a parent to replace those he had hardly known. The father/son relationship which develops between Kim and the lama takes both of them by surprise: at first Kim is merely eager to explore the exciting world beyond Lahore, and acting as a chela is simply a convenient means to this end; but as the novel goes on Kim discovers in himself the need to love and be loved, faithfully serving his master without thought for himself.
At the same time the lama's feelings for Kim are increasingly paternal, even though such feelings interfere with his yearning for the immaterial, and there can be few more moving conclusions to a novel than the great climax where the lama relates ecstatically how he became one with the Great Soul, yet turned back to this earthly life 'lest his chela miss the Way'. Thus the lama compromises his unearthly idealism for the sake of human love, while Kim discovers that there is more to life than the pleasurable opportunism of the moment: the Great Game, exciting as it is, is ultimately superficial.
So the novel, as well as a being a great love poem to India, embraces and celebrates life in all its diversity and warmth, abolishing distinction by colour, caste or creed: Kim himself is, after all, the 'Little Friend of all the World'.
Robin Hood Episode 1: Will You Tolerate This?Written By : VariousNarrated By : Richard ArmitagePublished By : BBC Audiobooks LtdRuntime : 2 hoursCategories : Action & Adventure
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PirateWritten By : Ted BellNarrated By : John SheaPublished By : Brilliance Audio IncRuntime : 16 hours 47 minutesCategories : Espionage
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Yankee Clipper. Chapter 07. "The Lure of Alani - Part 2"Written By : Jerry RobbinsNarrated By : Full Cast ProductionPublished By : Colonial Radio Theatre On The AirRuntime : 25 minutesCategories : Audio Theater
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POWDER RIVER Season 4. Episode 05: THE TOMAHAWK TRAILWritten By : Jerry RobbinsNarrated By : The Colonial Radio Theatre on the AirPublished By : Colonial Radio Theatre On The AirRuntime : 25 minutesCategories : Dramatizations
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