As I mentioned some time ago, I am working
on a critical history of the British short story, focusing on the generic
characteristics of the form as reflected in major short stories since the
eighteenth century. In this post and one next week, I discuss what I consider
to be the crucial generic issues in four stories by Rudyard Kipling. Works
Cited will appear at the end of Part II.
Hardly anyone talks about Rudyard
Kipling's fiction any more, especially his short fiction. However there was a
time when Kipling received quite a bit of attention, much of it negative. I suggest it might be worth noting that the
caustic criticism Kipling's short stories once received is precisely the same
kind of criticism that has often been lodged against the short story form in
general--for example, that the genre focuses only on episodes, that it is too
concerned with technique, that it is too dependent on tricks, and that it often
lacks a moral force.
Henry James noted that the young
Kipling realized very early the uniqueness of the short story, seeing what
chances the form offered for "touching life in a thousand different
places, taking it up in innumerable pieces, each a specimen and an
illustration." In a word, James argued, Kipling appreciates the
episode" (l8). However, it is just this appreciation for the episode,
according to influential critic Edmund Wilson, that prevented Kipling from
becoming a great novelist: "You can make an effective short story, as
Kipling so often does, about somebody's scoring off somebody else; but this is
not enough for a great novelist, who must show us large social forces, or
uncontrollable lines of destiny, or antagonistic impulses of the human spirit,
struggling with one another" (32).
Moreover, it is not simply because
Kipling could not "graduate," as it were, to the novel that critics
have found fault with him. Irish short story great Frank O'Connor confesses his
embarrassment in discussing Kipling's stories in comparison with master storytellers
like Chekhov and Maupassant, for he feels that Kipling has too much
consciousness of the individual reader as an audience who must be affected. C.
S. Lewis also recoiled from Kipling for similar reasons. Complaining about what
he calls the excess of Kipling's art, he cites how he constantly shortened and
honed his stories by blotting out passages with Indian ink. Ultimately, says
Lewis, the story is often shortened too much and as a result "the style
tends to be too continuously and obtrusively brilliant" with no
"leisureliness."
Lewis's criticism is similar to Edmund Wilson's, for
it suggests displeasure with Kipling's stories because they are not based on
the same assumptions as the novel. Lionel Trilling notes that the words
"craft" and "craftily" are Kipling's favorites, and Wilson
says that it is the paradox of his career that he "should have extended
the conquests of his craftsmanship in proportion to the shrinking of the range
of his dramatic imagination. As his responses to human beings became duller,
his sensitivity to his medium increased."
Such remarks indicate a failure to
make generic distinctions between the nature of the novel and the nature of the
short story; they either ignore or fail to take seriously Stevenson's
realization that the tale form does not focus on character, but rather on fable
and on the meaning of an episode in an ideal form. Bonamy Dobree has noted this
fabular aspect of Kipling's stories, suggesting that as Kipling's mastery of
the short story form increased, he became more and more inclined to introduce
an element of fable. "Great realist as he was, it is impossible to see
what he was really saying unless the fabular element is at least glimpsed"
(l67).
Such a judgment assumes that human
character in fiction is constituted solely of conduct, that character is
created and revealed by the actions of man in time and space, in the real
world. And indeed, such an assumption is
typical of the expectations we have about character in the novel form. However,
such need not be an assumption of character in the short story. As Isak Dinesen
has suggested in her story "The First Cardinal's Tale," the tale or
short story form is one that focuses on an idealization-- not man and woman
seen as they are in the everyday world, but rather transformed by the role they
play in the story itself. In the short story, it is the fable that is the
focus; the characters exist for the sake of the story rather than the story
existing for the sake of the characters.
In this post and one more, I will
briefly discuss four of Kipling's best-known stories--"The Man Who Would
be King," "Without Benefit of Clergy," "Mary
Postgate," and "The Gardener" in an attempt to identify the
essential short-story characteristics of Kipling's work. I do not claim that
these stories are not highly crafted,
that they do not involve unrealistic
character, that they do not depend on
artifice. For in many ways, they must stand guilty of such charges.
What I do
wish to suggest is that such charges are not necessarily damaging, for they
indicate that Kipling was perhaps the first English writer to embrace the
characteristics of the short story form whole-heartedly, and that thus his
stories are perfect representations of the transition point between the
old-fashioned tale of the nineteenth century and the modern twentieth-century short
story--a transition, however, which Joseph Conrad, because of the profundity of
his vision, perhaps was better able to make than Kipling.
One of Kipling's most Conrad-like
stories is one of his earliest pieces, "The Man Who Would Be King,"
which Henry James called an "extraordinary tale" and which many
critics have suggested is a typical Kipling social parable about British
imperialism in India. Walter Allen calls it a "great and heroic
story," but says that Kipling evades the metaphysical issues implicit in
the story and refuses to venture on the great generalizations forced upon
Conrad in "Heart of Darkness" (67-68). In perhaps the best discussion
of the story, Paul Fussell, Jr. calls "The Man Who Would Be King"
"a zany exemplum" in which fantastic burlesque events cloak a sober
theme. However, Fussell does not carry this notion of burlesque very far,
contenting himself with a discussion of the Biblical and Masonic allusions in
the piece.
Fussell suggests that much of the
plot of "The Man Who Would Be King" constitutes a "virtual
parody of Biblical history," but he does not understand that such a
burlesque and parody tone and structure might be the basic motivation of the
story. Instead he concludes by suggesting that although the story embodies a
Christian-Masonic commonplace moral that a man who would be a king must learn
to rule himself, Kipling ennobles the theme and rescues it from being obvious
by giving it an ironic treatment. The story, says Fussell, has a tone of
serious playfulness stemming from Freemasonry which must have struck Kipling as
both profound and silly at once.
"It is precisely this knowing Masonic tone which provides 'The Man
Who Would be King' with the paradoxical comic-pathetic quality which is the
major secret of both the brilliance of its narrative technique and the rich
humanity of its ethical import."
While I agree with Fussell that the
secret to the story is its tone, I feel that Fussell's concern for theme
prevents him from seeing that indeed tone and style are everything in the
tale. The story primarily focuses on the
crucial difference between a tale told by a narrator who merely reports a story
and a narrator who lives a story. The frame narrator is a journalist whose job
it is to report the doings of "real kings," whereas Peachey, the
inner narrator has as his task the reporting of the events of a "pretend
king." This situation reflects a
basic fictional problem: The primary
narrator tells us the story of Peachey and Davrot, which although it is
fiction, is presented as if it were reality. The secondary narrator tells us a
story of Peachey and Davrot in which the two characters project themselves out
of the "as-if" real world of the story into the purely projected and
fictional world of their adventure.
The tone of the tale reflects the
journalist narrator's bemused attitude toward the pair of unlikely heroes and
his incredulity about their "idiotic adventure." "The beginning
of everything," he describes, was his meeting with Peachey in a railway
train when he learns that the two are posing as correspondents for the
newspaper for which the narrator is indeed a real correspondent. Role-playing
is an important motif in the story, for indeed Peachey and Davrot are always
playing roles, for they are essentially vagabonds and loafers with no real
identity of their own.
After the
narrator returns to his office and becomes "respectable," Peachey and
Davrot interrupt this respectability (characterized by the narrator's concern
for the everyday reality that constitutes the subject of his work) to tell him
of their fantastic plan and to try to obtain from him a factual framework for
the country where they hope to become kings. "We have come to you to know
about this country, to read a book about it, and to be shown maps," says
Carnehan. "We want you to tell us that we are fools and to show us your
books." The mythic proportions of the two men, or rather their story-book
proportions, for mythic sounds like too serious a word here for the grotesque
adventurers, are indicated by the narrator's amused awareness that Davrot's red
beard seems to fill half the room and Carnehan's huge shoulders fill the other
half.
The story-like nature of the
adventure is indicated first of all by Peachey's frequent confusing of himself
with Davrot and by his frequent reference to himself in the third person. "There was a party called Peachey
Taliaferro Carnehan that was with Davrot. Shall I tell you about him? He died
out there in the cold. Slap from the bridge fell old Peachey, turning and
twisting in the air like a penny whirligig, or I am much mistaken and woeful
sore...." As Peachey tells his
tale, he insists that the narrator continue to look him in the eye, thus
becoming an image of the Ancient Mariner who holds the wedding guest by his
glittering eye and thus links the listener and teller in a story-made bond.
As Paul Fussell has suggested, the
events that Peachey tells suggests a parody of Biblical history, and indeed
Peachey and Davrot often speak to the people Davrot calls the "lost
tribe" in Biblical language. The purpose of these Biblical allusions is to
give Peachey's tale an externally-imposed story framework, indeed the most
basic and dignified story framework in Western culture. The progress of
Davrot's becoming king moves from fighting to craft via masonic ritual, a
ritual that reaffirms Davrot's superior position and controls his
followers.
However, since Davrot has
projected himself into the role of god as king, and thus assumes a position in
the kingdom as the fulfillment of prophecy and legend, he is bound to this
particular role. It is only when he wishes to escape the pre-established role
and marry a native girl that his world falls apart. When he is bitten by his
frightened intended bride, the cry, "Neither God nor Devil, but a
man," breaks the spell and propels Davrot and Peachey out of the fictional
world and back into reality again.
It seems clear from the serio-comic
tone and the parody use of Biblical story and language that what Kipling is
attempting in "The Man Who Would be King" is a burlesque version of a
basic dichotomy in the nature of story itself. The narrator, who deals with
real events in the world, tells a story of one who in turn tells a story of
fantastic events in which the real world is transformed into the fabular nature
of story itself. Davrot/Peachey project themselves into a purely story world,
but once accepted there, they cannot break the code of the roles they have
assumed.
It is little wonder that
"The Man Who Would be King" has such a comic tone, for truly what
Kipling is playing with here is not the nature of empires, but the nature of
story. If one wishes to read the story as a parable of the tenuous and
fictionally-imposed nature of British imperialism, then such a reading is
possible, but only because the story primarily is about the essentially tenuous
nature of the fable world itself.
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