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. The Englishman walked into a stately palace of many rooms, where the sunlight streamed in through wall and roof, and up crazy stone stairways, held together, it seemed, by the marauding trees. In one bastion, a wind-sown peepul had wrenched a thick slab clear of the wall, but held it tight pressed in a crook of a branch, as a man holds down a fallen enemy under his elbow, shoulder, and forearm. In another place, a strange uncanny wind sprung from nowhere, was singing all alone among the pillars of what may have been a Hall of Audience. |
This is from Chapter XI of Letters of Marque The young Kipling is vagabonding his way through Rajputana in the last weeks of 1888 and early 1889, writing despatches for the Pioneer of Allahabad. He has reached the great ruined city of Chitor, the scene of siege and fearful massacre in days gone by. The sight of the spectacular ruins stayed with him, and he drew on them for The Naulahka published three years later, and the Jungle Books written in Vermont in 1892/3. |
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This is from “Kaa’s Hunting” in The Jungle Book Little Mowgli has been captured by the bandar-log, the monkey people, who have carried him off across the tree-tops to the ruined city, Cold Lairs. As he swoops through the forest he manages to get a message to the kites, who pass it on to Baloo and Bagheera. They seek the aid of Kaa, the great python, who detests the monkeys. The three fight their way into the city to rescue Mowgli, and Kaa wreaks a terrible revenge on the bandar-log. |
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This is from “The King’s Ankus” in The Second Jungle Book. Kaa has taken Mowgli to the ruined city of Cold Lairs, deep in the jungle, to show him a great treasure that men would kill for. He is not interested in gold and silver, but carries away a jewelled ankus an elephant goad. Soon, hunting with Bagheera, he tires of its weight, and throws it away. Later they find that six men have been killed for the precious object. Mowgli takes it back to Cold Lairs, to get rid of it. |