The Beginnings
"The Beginnings" is a 1917 poem by the English writer
The first four stanzas have four lines each with alternate rhymes, while the fifth (and final) stanza has five lines. The last line of every stanza ends with "... the English began to hate". The context is the anti-German sentiment in Britain during World War I.[1][2] Kipling was known for never portraying Germans in a positive light, and had been the first to use the word "Hun" as a slur for Germans.[3] The poem was written following the death of his son in that war.
The poem first appeared in Kipling's 1917 collection A Diversity of Creatures, where it accompanies the short story "Mary Postgate". The story had originally been published in 1915, but without the poem.[1]
References
- ^ ISBN 9780521199728.
- ^ "Jingoism was only one front in Rudyard Kipling's war". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
- ISBN 9780199282661.
External links
Works related to "The Beginnings" at Wikisource