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~ Ebook Download Puck of Pook's Hill (Illustrated), by Rudyard Kipling

Ebook Download Puck of Pook's Hill (Illustrated), by Rudyard Kipling

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Puck of Pook's Hill (Illustrated), by Rudyard Kipling

Puck of Pook's Hill (Illustrated), by Rudyard Kipling



Puck of Pook's Hill (Illustrated), by Rudyard Kipling

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Puck of Pook's Hill (Illustrated), by Rudyard Kipling

Contents
(Short Stories)

Puck’s Song
Weland’s Sword
A Tree Song
Young Men at the Manor
Sir Richard’s Song
Harp Song of the Dane Women
The Knights of the Joyous Venture
Thorkild’s Song
Old Men at Pevensey
The Runes on Weland’s Sword
A Centurion of the Thirtieth
A British-Roman Song
On the Great Wall
A Song to Mithras
The Winged Hats
A Pict Song
Hal o’ the Draft
A Smugglers’ Song
The Bee Boy’s Song
‘Dymchurch Flit’
A Three-Part Song
Song of the Fifth River
The Treasure and the Law
The Children’s Song


Excerpt:

PUCK’S SONG
See you the dimpled track that runs,
All hollow through the wheat?
O that was where they hauled the guns
That smote King Philip’s fleet.
See you our little mill that clacks,
So busy by the brook?
She has ground her corn and paid her tax
Ever since Domesday Book.
See you our stilly woods of oak,
And the dread ditch beside?
O that was where the Saxons broke,
On the day that Harold died.
See you the windy levels spread
About the gates of Rye?
O that was where the Northmen fled,
When Alfred’s ships came by.
See you our pastures wide and lone,
Where the red oxen browse?
O there was a City thronged and known,
Ere London boasted a house.
And see you, after rain, the trace
Of mound and ditch and wall?
O that was a Legion’s camping-place,
When Cæsar sailed from Gaul.
[pg 2]
And see you marks that show and fade,
Like shadows on the Downs?
O they are the lines the Flint Men made,
To guard their wondrous towns.
Trackway and Camp and City lost,
Salt Marsh where now is corn;
Old Wars, old Peace, old Arts that cease,
And so was England born!
She is not any common Earth,
Water or wood or air,
But Merlin’s Isle of Gramarye,
Where you and I will fare.

  • Sales Rank: #1973247 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2016-01-03
  • Released on: 2016-01-03
  • Format: Kindle eBook

About the Author
Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936) was born in India, and spent the first six years of his life there, acquiring Hindustani as a second language and living in a bungalow like that in The Jungle Book. He was then sent to a boarding house in England with his sister Alice, where he had a miserable time until he was sent to The United Services College at Westward Ho! in Devon, the model for Stalky & Co. He left school at sixteen to return to India and work on The Civil and Military Gazette in Lahore, and his familiarity with all classes of society provided him with material for Barrack Room Ballads and Plain Tales from the Hills. In 1889 he returned to England and in 1891 published his novel The Light That Failed, and married Caroline (Carrie) Balestier the following year. They returned to her home Brattleboro, Vermont, where Kipling wrote the two Jungle Books and Captains Courageous. In 1896 the family returned to England, where Kipling continued to write prolifically, and was the first Englishman to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1907. His later years were darkened by the death of his son John at the Battle of Loos in 1915. Kipling's long association with Macmillan began in 1891, with the publication of Life's Handicap and continued with most of Kipling's prose and children's works, available in multiple editions long after his death in 1936.

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
The book is great, this kindle version isn't
By Grandma Books
Puck is a great story that every child should know, but this is a review of this Penny Books kindle edition.

There is no active table of contents. In fact, there is no Table of Contents at all. The formatting is strange- quotes that should be centered are offset to the right. Footnotes have been copied from the original version that this text is obviously taken from, but you can't click on the references, and they are not explained at the end of the chapters (I don't know if they are at the end of the book, but even if they are, that won't do you much good since you can't navigate from footnote to explanation and back to the text again).

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
"By Oak, Ash, and Thorn!"
By Jefferson
Puck of Pook's Hill (1906) is Rudyard Kipling's paean to England and history and youth, as Puck, "the oldest Old Thing in England," introduces to two children, siblings Dan and Una, various figures and events from throughout three thousand or so years of British history.

The first of the ten tales in the book features Puck's account of the advent, worship, and end of pagan Gods in Britain, focusing on one in particular, Weland, Smith of the Nordic Gods. In the second through fourth stories, the Norman knight Sir Richard Dalyngridge tells of his coming as a boy in 1066 with William the Conqueror to take England and instead being taken by the country (Norman and Saxon cultures and peoples merging into a new England), going as a middle-aged man on a pilgrimage that morphs into a Danish piratical voyage to Africa (men joyfully adventuring), and trying as an old man to help his lord protect England from internal and external foes (making the inevitable transition from youth to old age). The fifth through seventh stories are told by Parnesius, a British-born Roman, about his career as a centurion stationed on Hadrian's Wall during the 4th century when the Spanish general Maximus pulled vital troops from England to help him in his effort to become Emperor of Rome, making it more difficult to protect the Wall from Picts and "Winged Hats" (Vikings). Like Sir Richard's stories, Parnesius' are about the rich mix of British culture, the rewards of male friendship, the need to give yourself to something bigger and better than yourself, and the swiftness by which young people grow up. In the eighth story, "Hal-o-the Draft," a young, talented, cocky Renaissance draftsman-architect is sent to renovate a church in Sussex, where his job is complicated by a Scottish pirate, local smugglers, and the explorer Sebastian Cabot. The ninth story is told by Puck in the guise of a local rustic about the "flitting" of fairies from England during the Reformation, because fairies (like bees) cannot abide hate and war. In the last story a Jewish physician named Kadmiel relates his key role in the writing and signing of the Magna Carta in 1215. Kadmiel's story conveys what it was like to be a cruelly exploited and persecuted Jew, expresses the belief in universal freedom for all people, and ties up all the tales by revealing what happened to the treasure that was gained by the sword that was made by Weland in the first story.

Kipling writes some wonderful prose in this compact book. He evokes the lush Sussex countryside as sensually experienced by healthy, active, and curious children:

"They lay beneath a roof of close green, watching the water trickle over the flood-gates down the mossy brick chute from the millstream to the book. A big trout--the children knew him well--rolled head and shoulders at some fly that sailed round the bend, while, once in just so often, the brook rose a fraction of an inch against all the wet pebbles, and they watched the slow draw and shiver of a breath of air through the tree-tops. Then the little voices of the slipping water began again.
'It's like the shadows talking, isn't it?' said Una."

He writes some magical fantasy:
"Magic as black as Merlin could make it, and the whole sea was green fire and white foam with singing mermaids in it. And the Horses of the Hills picked their way from one wave to another by the lightning flashes!"

He interestingly depicts the complexities of human nature:
"Then he [a scoundrel] warmed to it [his confession], and smoothly set out all his shifts, malices, and treacheries, his extreme boldnesses (he was desperate bold); his retreats, shufflings, and counterfeitings (he was also inconceivably a coward); his lack of gear and honour; his despair at their loss; his remedies, and well-coloured contrivances. Yes, he waved the filthy rags of his life before us, as though they had been some proud banner."

He writes great lines about human nature and life:
"I was on a pilgrimage to forget, which no pilgrimage brings."
"We talked together of times past. That is all men can do when they grow old."
"It is knightly to keep faith, even after a thousand years."

And to introduce and or conclude each tale he writes seventeen songs, each one in a different style for a different voice, among them Puck’s, a Viking’s, A Pict’s, a sword's rune's, a smuggler’s, and a bee keeper boy’s.

The book, then, features rich writing, engaging historical stories, lively and beautiful songs, and interesting and useful themes for children.

I do have some reservations about Puck of Pook's Hill. First, Kipling's history is male-centered. Although Una is a spunky girl, there is not a single positive female actor in his historical tales, and the most important relationships are between men, especially soldiers fighting the good fight. Where is Boudica or Elizabeth, or even a baker's wife or a midwife? Second, to prevent Una and Dan from chattering about Puck to grownups, which would result in the children being made to see a doctor, Kipling has Puck erase their memories after each tale and before each teatime. The mind-wipe contrivance conflicts with Kipling's obvious desire to communicate the interesting and important and relevant nature of history. Finally, unlike all the other songs, "The Children's Song" that closes the book contains much didactic patriotic messaging, as in the last stanza:
Land of our Birth, our faith, our pride,
For whose dear sake our fathers died;
O Motherland, we pledge to thee
Head, heart and hand through the years to be.

That's the kind of thing that Kipling detractors focus on when they condemn him for being a pro-empire, white-man's burden writer.

My reservations notwithstanding, I did enjoy Puck of Pook's Hill, and recommend it to readers interested in British history, Kipling's work, and stories designed to make children more curious and active about their history, world, and fellow human beings.

About this illustrated kindle version, I didn't notice (m)any typos and the old illustrations are attractive.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Kipling 1
By Michelle Scutt
I loved this as a child, but never realised the immense amount of English history that it portrayed, it is still as vibrant and interesting as when it gave me my first introduction to Kipling.

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