Rudyard Kipling's book Stalky & Co. is about young men attending a British boarding school. Three young main characters in this collection of school stories have a smug, cynical attitude toward authority and patriotism. After the stories were featured in periodicals for the preceding two years, it was first published in 1899. Part I of ""Slaves of the Lamp."" Mr. King interrupts the three boys while they are practicing a pantomime of ""Aladdin"" because he has discovered jokes Beetle wrote about him. When the younger child who taught King the poems is there, he drags Beetle into his study and corrects him. Stalky gets an intoxicated carter to throw stones at King by shooting him with a catapult. In ""An Unsavoury Interlude,"" Mr. King makes fun of Beetle for once being frightened to take a bath in the ocean, which causes the boys from Mr. King's house to call the boys from Mr. Prout's house ""stinkers.""Many lads take part eagerly in order to train for their future professions as military officers. But when a member of parliament is asked to speak at the school on ""patriotism,"" he angers the lads by raising the Union Jack. The cadet corps left the next morning under Stalky's leadership. The majority of Kipling's characters, who are now about thirty, are soldiers or civil officials in India.
This is barely a work of fiction. The stories of the three schoolboys, Stalky, M'Turk and Beetle, aren't all entirely complete and true, but the boys existed and so did the teachers and school. The schoolboy dialog is difficult at first. "Fag" still means short (like a "fag," a very short cigar or cigarette) but in the school it means the youngest boys of the lower form classes. Being "easy to draw" is a sharp criticism for "showing one's feelings too transparently." "Je vais gloater" is pseudo-French, meaning, "I'm going to gloat." Stalky and Company is full of lingo like this. If you like pranks, you will laugh at this book and enjoy the story of increasing criminal competence developed by these three rascals. If you think boys should be formed into serious and studious young men through studies and daily rigors on the playing field, on the other hand, you're going to hate this ruthless, unfunny, nightmarish book. This established argument about Stalky and Company has been going on for most of a century, and some of the praises and criticisms were contained over 40 years ago in "Kipling and the Critics," edited by Eliot Gilbert. To Kipling's credit, not all the adventures are funny nor harmless. There are some serious messages, especially at the end. The careful reader will recieve an astonishing education, for the boys described were real, the school actually existed, and the graduates were prepared for "Sandhurst," the informal name for the town where the Royal Military Academy was and remains located. So it is a realistic story about boys prepared through secondary education to become officers of the British Empire at its historical high period. If you enjoy this book and wonder what the real story was, it is still possible to get a copy of M'Turk's (Beresford's) actual autobiography about going to school with Kipling and Stalky (later General Dunsterville) in "School Days with Kipling," by Beresford. The sketch drawings of the boys and masters at the school described in "Stalky and Company" are thoroughly amusing, and a story of a play the boys put on for each other is a masterpiece of farce.
Humorous Tales by Kipling - Meet Stalky, M'Turk, and Beetle
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Stalky and Co. is great fun. I have twice read these nine clever tales of three outrageous school boys - Stalky, M'Turk, and Beetle. Their ongoing battle of wits with masters (especially their nemesis, the sanctimonious Mr. King), fellow students, and the occasional school bully are immensely entertaining. Rudyard Kipling allegedly based these stories on his school years; to some degree Beetle was a self-portrait. I had some initial difficulty with Kipling's schoolboy dialogue, but I did eventually become fluent in late nineteenth century British schoolboy slang. This fluency is critical to enjoying Kipling as the stories are comprised almost entirely of dialogue. We quickly learn in the first story, In Ambush, that despite rules to the contrary, all right minded boys built huts in the furze hill behind the school, a place of retreat and meditation, where they smoked. Stalky, M'Turk, and Beetle were no exception. In this tale the three friends brilliantly outwit Mr. King, but they prove no match for the Headmaster, the final arbitrator and administer of justice. Mr. King again underestimates the trio in the comical tale, An Unsavory Interlude. As Kipling unveils the convoluted, devious exploits of Stalky and friends, I wondered how they found time for Latin, mathematics, writing, and other studies. The answer is revealed in The Impressionists, another uneven match between the trio and a master, this time the overly conscientious Mr. Prout. The tone of the last few stories - A Little Prep, The Flag of Their Country, and The Last Term - remained amusing, but they addressed more serious topics like bullying, sincere patriotism, and true courage. Kipling concludes with a visit with the schoolboys more than a decade later, now responsible men entrusted with managing and protecting the extensive British empire. Stalky and Co. is as delightfully humorous today as it was a century ago. I am sure that you will enjoy meeting Stalky, M'Turk, and Beetle. Cheers.
Reader Beware
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
Kipling appears to be freighted with controversey. That said, Stalky & Co. is one of those small masterpieces rarely read-more the pity. This wonderful, surprising, semi-autobiographical novel takes place within an English boys school, an institution primarily serving to push young officer candidates forward in their pre-military careers,cramming,inelegantly,for Sandhurst and the like. What sets this book apart from the entire genre is Kipling's extraordinary capacity to bring the three major characters, and the larger cast of minor players, teachers, staff, students, to a brilliant realization. But there is more: within these pages are some of the most uncanny perceptions of human behavior one can find, either within or without a pyschology text. Whatever one thinks of Kipling or the context within which he wrote, this slim volume is luminously lit both by the writer's indelible affection for his creations, and the profundity of what their experiences teach us all. If you swear a solemn oath to read only one single English Nineteenth Century Novel outside of the incomparable canon of Dickens, please, please, track down of copy of Stalky and Company, put aside all preconceptions, and for a too brief period of time, enter a rare, rare world.
One of the best written books in the English language.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
Well, get ready to take yourself back to grammar and high school! If you attended a small, interactive private (in the US sense) school, this incredibly imaginative coverage of the genre will leave you gasping for breath more than once. If you, in your youth, were adventurous, mischievous and inventive, always in some sort of trouble, this is a book that will recapture those times both when you beat the system and when the system beat you. My father, who would be 103 if he still lived, passed this book on to me in his will, and I still have the original. In its thirty years of existence it's become dogeared and yellowed, like its former and its current owner. And it cost $.60 originally. You don't have to be old to enjoy it; you don't even have to have a "past" to laugh out loud every single time you read it. Buy it! You'll be passing it on to your children.
Three boys' lives at a British school in the 19th century.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 27 years ago
This is one of the few books I chose to take with me when I left the country for a two year stint at teaching English in Japan. It is the same book as "Stalky & Co." except it includes five stories and four poems that are not to be found in the other version. It is Kipling's amazing talent for re-creating the spoken dialect of a people that makes this book such a tour-de-force. In "The Complete Stalky & Co.," he aimes that ear at the 19th century British schoolboy, and re-creates for us the long-vanished world responsible for the formation of the men that populate his other novels - the British private school. The story is of three young friends at war with their teachers, a conflict which is kept in check only by the wisdom and experience of the headmaster. Although the stories are for the most part humorous, they clearly show Kipling's perspective on the maxim of 'as the twig is bent, so goes the tree, and as the novel is partly autobiographical it is interesting as an insight into Kipling's development as well as a story in its own right.Although "The Complete Stalky & Co." is considered by many to be a book for children, the plotting, dialect work, and occasional adult references set it apart as a rare story that may be about children but perhaps is not intended for children.
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