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    Introduction

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    In an issue of the London World in April, 1890, there appeared
    the following paragraph: "Two small rooms connected by a tiny
    hall afford sufficient space to contain Mr. Rudyard Kipling, the
    literary hero of the present hour, 'the man who came from
    nowhere,' as he says himself, and who a year ago was consciously
    nothing in the literary world."

    Six months previous to this Mr. Kipling, then but twenty-four
    years old, had arrived in England from India to find that fame
    had preceded him. He had already gained fame in India, where
    scores of cultured and critical people, after reading
    "Departmental Ditties," "Plain Tales from the Hills," and various
    other stories and verses, had stamped him for a genius.

    Fortunately for everybody who reads, London interested and
    stimulated Mr. Kipling, and he settled down to writing. "The
    Record of Badalia Herodsfoot," and his first novel, "The Light
    that Failed," appeared in 1890 and 1891; then a collection of
    verse, "Life's Handicap, being stories of Mine Own People," was
    published simultaneously in London and New York City; then
    followed more verse, and so on through an unending series.

    In 1891 Mr. Kipling met the young author Wolcott Balestier, at
    that time connected with a London publishing house. A strong
    attachment grew between the two, and several months after their
    first meeting they came to Mr. Balestier's Vermont home, where
    they collaborated on "The Naulahka: A Story of West and East,"
    for which The Century paid the largest price ever given by an
    American magazine for a story. The following year Mr. Kipling
    married Mr. Balestier's sister in London and brought her to
    America.

    The Balestiers were of an aristocratic New York family; the
    grandfather of Mrs. Kipling was J. M. Balestier, a prominent
    lawyer in New York City and Chicago, who died in 1888, leaving a
    fortune of about a million. Her maternal grandfather was E.
    Peshine Smith of Rochester, N. Y., a noted author and jurist, who
    was selected in 1871 by Secretary Hamilton Fish to go to Japan as
    the Mikado's adviser in international law. The ancestral home of
    the Balestiers was near Brattleboro', Vt., and here Mr. Kipling

    brought his bride. The young Englishman was so impressed by the
    Vermont scenery that he rented for a time the cottage on the
    "Bliss Farm," in which Steele Mackaye the playwright wrote the
    well known drama "Hazel Kirke."

    The next spring Mr. Kipling purchased from his brother-in-law,
    Beatty Balestier, a tract of land about three miles north of
    Brattleboro', Vt., and on this erected a house at a cost of
    nearly $50,000, which he named "The Naulahka." This was his home
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