Kipling's India . cation of Otis Yeere(Under the Deodars). There, when the education wascomplete, Mrs. Hauksbee wept out her chagrin and dis-appointment into the sympathetic ears of Mrs. Mallowe. In A Second-Rate Woman {Under the Deodars)—the story that gives us better than any other the noble,womanly side of Mrs. Hauksbees nature, in her patientnursing of little Dora—The Foundry figures againas the scene of little Doras peril. With the child chok-ing to death, and her mother and Mrs. Hauksbee help-less with fright, the Dowd stepped in, with coolhead and steady hand applied the saving medicine
Kipling's India . cation of Otis Yeere(Under the Deodars). There, when the education wascomplete, Mrs. Hauksbee wept out her chagrin and dis-appointment into the sympathetic ears of Mrs. Mallowe. In A Second-Rate Woman {Under the Deodars)—the story that gives us better than any other the noble,womanly side of Mrs. Hauksbees nature, in her patientnursing of little Dora—The Foundry figures againas the scene of little Doras peril. With the child chok-ing to death, and her mother and Mrs. Hauksbee help-less with fright, the Dowd stepped in, with coolhead and steady hand applied the saving medicine, andreceived the remorseful embraces of Mrs. Bent and Over the teacups at The Foundry, proved that she was sometimes nice to herown sex, when, for the sake of an English girl whomshe had never seen, she snatched Lieutenant PluflBes(The Rescue of Pluffles) from the vampire hold ofMrs. Reiver, the woman about whom there was noth-ing good unless it was her dress. This, by the way, [40]. !5o •TV « ^ V I^ T* 03 •- r* aSSo:^ Ia > fl t« 5 oj *j ^rt CO ^- tn V _^ a ^ t- O (- < In -a, a; 4;CO 4; If 44H a d 03 3O o-a a^ *j ^ _i W Ca fl 3 I »3 m c4 : H ANGLO-INDIA was the same Mrs. Reiver who figures in the story InError {Plain Tales from the Hills) as the unconscioussaviour of Moriarty. Mrs. Hauksbee again came to the rescue of a mis-guided youth when she saved young Peythroppe ofKidnapped {Plain Tales from the Hills) from mar-riage with the impossible Miss Castries. Leaving the Mall, you come to Jakko Hill, guardingthe town on the East. It was near Jakko, just below theTown Hall, that Kim met the Hindu boy sent to guidehim to the house of Lurgan Sahib: Together they set off through the mysterious dusk, full of thenoises of a city below the hillside, and the breath of a cool wind indeodar-crowned Jakko, shouldering the stars. The house-Hghts,scattered on every level, made, as it were, a double were fixed, others belonged to the
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectkipling, bookyear1915