KIM's Womenfolk
55 years ago I wrote an A+ term paper on "The Motherhood of Lady MacBeth." Did I make much of little in Shakespeare's play?" *** Are the handful of women in Rudyard Kipling's 1901 novel of British India, more important to KIM than Lady MacBeth's motherhood? Yes. But the women are background, peripheral to the spiritual quest of Kimball O'Hara between ages 13 and 17. Very few European women are mentioned in KIM: (1) spy chief Colonel Creighton's wife for her brief role as hostess in Umballa for the Army Commander in Chief; and (2) Annie Shott, Kim's Irish domestic servant mother. Annie died of cholera when Kim was three. Perhaps author Kipling killed her off because of the well-attested negative cross-cultural influences of British Memsahibs within the British Empire. They often distanced themselves socially, even the poor like Annie O'Hara, from the sea of alien natives surrounding them. It seems important that Kim lost his Irish mother early, and, not long after that, his still young ex-Sergeant Irish father died of drink and opium. Parents were around long enough to teach Kim the ruling class's English language and to make sure he knew his rights as a potential ruler of India. Their early deaths freed Kim from British prejudice against Indian Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs. White Kim grew towards manhood uniquely open-minded. *** On his father's death a new woman was there for Kim: his father's unnamed mistress, "the half-caste woman who looked after him" in Lahore. She insisted that the white boy wear European "trousers, shirt and a battered hat." But impish Kim often dyed his skin even darker than the sun had burnt it and passed himself off as a low-caste Hindu for secret missions carrying love letters to and from other men's wives across the rooftops of Lahore for the Pathan horse trader Mahboob Ali . *** Kipling sketches scenes of a wealthy hill country noblewoman who travels down to the hot plains to visit her married daughter. She wins Buddhist merit by providing food and shelter to Kim and the Red Lama of Tibet whose disciple Kim made himself. But the woman, though kind-hearted, also wore out the aged lama with talk and requests for charms to assure the health of her grandchildren. *** Several native women remark on the good looks of our teenage spy-in-training for "the Great Game." Kim is sure to break many a girl's heart. Towards novel's end, the lama, seriously injured by two Tsarist spies, finds shelter with Kim in the tiny Himalayan hamlet Shamlegh-under-the-Snow. The still beautiful Woman of Shamlegh despatches her two husbands with others to carry the lama to the healing lowlands on a litter. She comes on to Kim and he sees it. It has happened before "in lands where women make the love." Kim is annoyed: "How can a man follow the Way or the Great Game when he is so-always pestered by women?" Previous women and girls had treated Kim as a boy. Now the Woman of Shamlegh flirts as woman does with man. Why? Because disguised Kim reminds her of a young huntsman Sahib she had once nursed to health. He promised to return and marry her. He did not, despite her education in English by "Ker-lis-ti-an" missionaries. Knowing what she wants, Kim "kissed her on the cheek, adding in English: 'Thank you verree much, my dear.'" *** Fortunately, there is much more in Kim to delight you than his fleeting relations with women. -OOO-
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback.
Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.