
Indian Tales
by Rudyard Kipling
In these stories, Kipling sets the stage for encounters between the East and the West. Kipling takes on the thorny issues of empire, race, race, miscegenation and the practice of going native, and uses them as literary tropes to examine human culture, religion and society.
Chapters
- The Finest Story in the World
- With the Main Guard
- Wee Willie Winkie
- The Rout of the White Hussars
- At Twenty-two
- The Courting of Dinah Shadd
- The Story of Muhammad Din
- In Flood Time
- My Own True Ghost Story
- The Big Drunk Draf'
- By Word of Mouth
- The Drums of the Fore and Aft
- The Sending of Dana Da
- On the City Wall
- The Broken-link Handicap
- On Greenhow Hill
- To Be Filed for Reference
- The Man Who Would Be King
- The Gate of the Hundred Sorrows
- The Incarnation of Krishna Mulvaney
- His Majesty the King
- The Strange Ride of Morrowbie Jukes
- In the House of Suddhoo
- Black Jack
- The Taking of Lungtungpen
- The Phantom Rickshaw
- On the Strength of a Likeness
- Private Learoyd's Story
- Wressley of the Foreign Office
- The Solid Muldoon
- The Three Musketeers
- Beyond the Pale
- The God from the Machine
- The Daughter of the Regiment
- The Madness of Private Ortheris
- L'Envoi