The Female of the Species 1911 When the Himalayan peasant meets the he-bear in his pride, He shouts to scare the monster, who will often turn aside. But the she-bear thus accosted rends the peasant tooth and nail. For the female of the species is more deadly than the male. ...
Animal Stories: "The Law Of The Jungle" from the "Second Jungle Book" read by Rupert Degas; "Mowgli's Brothers" from "The Jungle Book" read by Rupert Degas; "The Female Of The Species" (1911) read by Rupert Degas; "How The Whale Got His Throat" from the "Just So Stories" read ...
The colonel's lady and Judy O'Grady Are sisters under their skins. - Rudyard Kipling | Women Quotes Add to Favorite List For the female of the species is more deadly than the male. - Rudyard Kipling | Women Quotes Add to Favorite List A rag and a bone and a hank of hair. - Rudyar...
p. 208: A252 THE FEMALE OF THE SPECIES: An eighth copy of the broadside (Bonhams 2013 3290) is now at Yale. In the A. P. Watt & Son Archive, Yale, is the letter of 8 May 1928 from Flora Livingston to A. S. Watt, and the photostats of the two versions which she sent for ...
84 The English Flag 85 The 'eathen 86 Evarra And His Gods 87 The Explanation 88 The Explorer 89 The Fabulists 90 The Fairies' Siege 91 The Fall of Jock Gillespie 92 Farewell and adieu... 93 The Female of the Species 94 The Fires 95 The First Chantey 96 The Flight 97 The Floods 98...
give[s] women a subtle and often sinister power over men" (185). Pat Barr has blamed Kipling for the "stereotyped and superficial vision of the nineteeth-century Anglo-Indian woman that has remained current ever since as being truly representative of the whole species" (159). But of ...
an old female catguerdon an earned privilege or rewardgules Her.- the tincture red: in a blazon without color, indicated by parallel vertical lines [OF. from L. gula, the throat] ("the leaping of flames that flung their bloody gules")gymno...
It seems, then, that the female characters in Anglo-Indian literature depict contradictions that are themselves embodied by the women on whom those characters are based. And though Sharpe intentionally excludes native women from her investigation of the role of women in imperial India, much recent ...