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marksmanship rather than brute strength. He is no coward, however; in the story "His
Private Honour" Ortheris actually challenges an officer who has accidentally struck him to a fist fight, and inflicts considerable damage even though he is ultimately knocked out. Ortheris is the only member of the Soldiers Three who expresses a desire to rise in society, perhaps because he is the product of a modern big city, London, and has a skilled trade as a taxidermist.
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256:. Their characters are given in the sentence that follows: "Collectively, I think, but am not certain, they are the worst men in the regiment so far as genial blackguardism goes"—that is, they are trouble to authority, and always on the lookout for petty gain; but Kipling is at pains never to suggest that they are evil or immoral. They are representative of the admiration he has for the
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day, Mulvaney, still in a rage, leads his friends several miles off base, where he tells the story of how he once prevented the murder of the cruel and immoral Sgt. O'Hara. Mulvaney makes it clear that though he hated O'Hara there was respect between them, such as is no longer possible with younger men like
Mullins in command.
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The narrator of the
Soldiers Three stories is a young British reporter for a newspaper in India. He is never identified by name. Like Kipling, he prides himself on a profound knowledge of the British army and the character of the common British soldier. He is also an unapologetic booster of the cause
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Learoyd is a slow-moving, slow-talking, but deeply loyal and quietly sympathetic
Yorkshireman. While Ortheris sometimes mocks his slow speech and northern English dialect, Mulvaney shows him enormous respect. A born listener, just as Mulvaney is a born talker, he serves as a silent background in most
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Many of
Mulvaney's stories are contradictory in nature, reflecting his divided view of himself. "Good cause has the Regmint to know me for the best soldier in ut. Better cause have I to know meself as the worst man." In a story like "The Solid Muldoon," for example, Mulvaney begins by bragging of his
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In many ways
Ortheris is the "odd man out" in the trio of British soldiers. Mulvaney refers to him as "little man" and he appears to be younger as well as smaller than tough, Irish Mulvaney and hulking Yorkshireman Learoyd. Unlike his comrades, Ortheris is a superb rifle shot and in combat relies on
283:. His "t"s and "d"s are often aspirated (indicated by a following "h", as in "dhrinkin"); the strength of his pronunciation of "wh-" is often indicated by preceding it with "f" ("fwhat" for "what"); his "s" is often followed by an "h" (as in "pershuade"); the different quality of his vowels from the
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The passing of time and the loss of youth are themes in a number of
Mulvaney's narratives as well. In "Black Jack" the story begins in the present, with an aging Mulvaney needlessly humiliated and punished with extra duty by callow, weak-willed Sergeant Mullins. After his punishment is over for the
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Mulvaney is also representative of the stereotypical
Irishman in that he drinks, and has lost all his good conduct pay and badges; but he is less typical in that he is an exemplary soldier in what he (and Kipling) thinks is important: he may be regularly Confined to Barracks for his misdemeanours
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This shows not only the spelling of his speech, but indicates the articulate fluency with which he speaks (he has "the gift of the gab") and also demonstrates, if read aloud, Kipling's feeling for the rhythms and "swing" of Irish
English. It also has the word "misdoubt", which is more local than
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shuperior officer and does it at the salute" he is both the backbone of the
British army (and therefore the British empire) and also a tragic hero whose only son died in childbirth and who has nothing to show for his decades of service other than the love of his wife, the devoted Dinah Shadd.
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of the expanding British empire, and he continually draws the reader's attention to the essential role of the military. More than that, the stories themselves are meant to drive home how difficult conditions are for common soldiers like Ortheris, Mulvaney, and Learoyd while serving in India.
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Even though Mulvaney gets into some fairly farcical adventures, (passing himself off as a god in "The Incarnation of Krishna Mulvaney") and speaks in a broad Irish dialect, in the bulk of the stories Kipling portrays him seriously. As a veteran private of the line who "knows the duty of his
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The three are distinguished by their accents, and by Kipling's use of standard stereotyping. If money is to be discussed, it will be done by Learoyd, the caricature Yorkshireman always careful with "brass"; Mulvaney, the Irishman, is the most talkative; and the cockney Ortheris is the most
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success with women during his long-ago days as a fast-rising corporal in the regiment. Yet as the story continues, we see Mulvaney not only rejected by the beautiful and virtuous Annie Bragin, but forced to see himself as others see him, a shallow cad driven solely by vanity and lust.
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The narrator looks after a dog belonging to a soldier (who appears to be Ortheris) and seeks the advice of another soldier (who appears to be Mulvaney). Neither soldier is named, Ortheris features mainly at the start and the end, and Mulvaney features once very briefly.
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street-wise. But each is much more than a caricature or stereotype: that aspect of their construction is partly a question of the economy Kipling has to use in these short pieces, and partly an aspect of his presentation of himself as an ingenuous young reporter.
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of the Soldiers Three stories. One of the most tragic and powerful stories in the Soldiers Three collection, however, "On Greenhow Hill," details John Learoyd's past in memorable fashion and explains why he joined the army.
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Private Terence Mulvaney (whose surname should be pronounced Mullvanny) is the leader of the three. He is an Irishman: his speech is distinguished by certain dialect characteristics, even if the dialect is to some extent
266:(1892), and also show his interest in, and respect for the "uneducated" classes. Kipling had great respect for the independence of mind, initiative and common sense of the three—and their cunning.
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According to John McGivering, "it has been suggested that when Kipling asked himself 'Who is to be the third Musketeer?' he answered himself 'The author is!' (Ortheris)."
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shows him defending the tradition of Thursday half day working, more successfully that the rest of the regiment) and resents some "cruel bad treatment" by the Colonel in
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Involves Corporal Slane of the Old Regiment, who is about to marry Jhansi McKenna (The Daughter of the Regiment).
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l of a man I was fifteen years ago. They called me Black Mulvaney in th
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Stories in which the three are only peripherally involved:
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of his day is indicated by variant spellings. For example,
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on "The Three Musketeers" at the Kipling Society's website
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included "Private Ortheris's Song" in his 1941 collection
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Follows immediately after the action in Silver's Theatre
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From Sea to Sea and Other Sketches, Letters of Travel
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89:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
311:k a woman's eye. I did that! Ortheris, ye scrub,
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315:at are ye sniggerin' at? Do you misdoubt me?
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1032:Rudyard Kipling's Verse: Definitive Edition
599:In the Matter of a Private (Soldiers Three)
52:Learn how and when to remove these messages
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349:"He was the tallest man in the regiment" (
843:Wee Willie Winkie and Other Child Stories
229:Learn how and when to remove this message
211:Learn how and when to remove this message
149:Learn how and when to remove this message
607:Garm - a Hostage (Actions and Reactions)
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459:Mulvaney not married, still a Corporal
1756:Literary characters introduced in 1888
756:The Naulahka: A Story of West and East
827:The Phantom 'Rickshaw and Other Tales
671:New Readers Guide, Kipling Society UK
646:New Readers Guide, Kipling Society UK
437:Mulvaney still with the Black Tyrone
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1595:Ritual of the Calling of an Engineer
561:Incarnation of Krishna Mulvaney, The
403:In approximate chronological order.
87:adding citations to reliable sources
1766:Rudyard Kipling stories about India
1626:Rudyard Kipling: A Remembrance Tale
1367:The Conversion of Aurelian McGoggin
1325:The Arrest of Lieutenant Golightly
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1507:The Sing-Song of Old Man Kangaroo
1164:The Gods of the Copybook Headings
33:This article has multiple issues.
1781:Fictional British Army personnel
1761:Short stories by Rudyard Kipling
1652:Caroline Starr Balestier Kipling
1066:The Ballad of the 'Clampherdown'
550:Madness of Private Ortheris, The
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98:"Learoyd, Mulvaney and Ortheris"
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1786:Fictional people from Yorkshire
74:needs additional citations for
41:or discuss these issues on the
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1776:Male characters in literature
1388:The Drums of the Fore and Aft
1206:The Last of the Light Brigade
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486:Daughter of the Regiment, The
578:Takes place in current time
513:Action takes place in Burma
475:Courting of Dinah Shadd, The
426:Set before Learoyd enlisted
1500:The Ship that Found Herself
1073:The Ballad of East and West
1040:A Choice of Kipling's Verse
589:Mulvaney retired from army
507:Taking of Lungtungpeng, The
374:A Choice of Kipling's Verse
295:n I became a man, an' the d
191:the claims made and adding
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1381:The Devil and the Deep Sea
1353:The Butterfly that Stamped
795:Plain Tales from the Hills
667:"The God from the Machine"
553:Plain Tales from the Hills
510:Plain Tales from the Hills
500:Plain Tales from the Hills
492:Mulvaney still a Corporal
489:Plain Tales from the Hills
481:Mulvaney still a Corporal
1514:The Taking of Lungtungpen
1458:The Man Who Would Be King
1143:The Female of the Species
442:God from the Machine, The
244:introduces, in the story
1563:Yoked with an Unbeliever
1346:The Broken-Link Handicap
1059:The Absent-Minded Beggar
1008:The Fringes of the Fleet
811:The Story of the Gadsbys
351:The God from the Machine
332:The God from the Machine
1612:Aerial Board of Control
1542:Toomai of the Elephants
1430:In the House of Suddhoo
518:Private Learoyd's Story
307:m days, an', begad, I t
1791:Fictional Irish people
1590:Indian Railway Library
1493:The Rescue of Pluffles
1300:The White Man's Burden
1043:(by T. S. Eliot, 1941)
937:All the Mowgli Stories
913:The Second Jungle Book
642:"The Three Musketeers"
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285:Received Pronunciation
1700:Georgiana Burne-Jones
1676:John Lockwood Kipling
1339:Bread upon the Waters
1199:The King's Pilgrimage
921:Letting in the Jungle
748:The Light That Failed
497:Three Musketeers, The
470:Mulvaney not married
448:Mulvaney not married
1549:Watches of the Night
1528:The Three Musketeers
1521:Three and – an Extra
1332:Baa Baa, Black Sheep
1192:In the Neolithic Age
859:Barrack-Room Ballads
583:Big Drunk Draf', The
464:My Lord the Elephant
327:The Three Musketeers
263:Barrack-Room Ballads
247:The Three Musketeers
83:improve this article
1472:Miss Youghal's Sais
1024:Limits and Renewals
1011:(1915, non-fiction)
1000:Rewards and Fairies
992:Puck of Pook's Hill
768:Captains Courageous
528:With the Main Guard
1716:Philip Burne-Jones
1708:Edward Burne-Jones
1629:(2006 documentary)
1416:His Chance in Life
1265:The Sons of Martha
1213:The Lowestoft Boat
1178:Hymn Before Action
1016:Debits and Credits
819:In Black and White
616:Opinions of others
572:His Private Honour
453:Solid Muldoon, The
320:Standard English.
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1637:(2007 film)
1634:My Boy Jack
1621:(1997 play)
1618:My Boy Jack
1535:Thrown Away
1251:Recessional
1244:My Boy Jack
1150:Fuzzy-Wuzzy
1136:A Death-Bed
945: 1895
787:Collections
369:T. S. Eliot
281:stage Irish
201:August 2015
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1402:False Dawn
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1272:Submarines
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185:improve it
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