Kipling Rudyard Kipling's "Mary Postgate" is set during World War I, at a time when British social hierarchies were at their peak in the wake of the Victorian Era and at the dawn of a new world order. Postgate seems to have her pulse on the shifting values and norms that unfold throughout her generation. Issues related to political, social, and economic power are raised in the short story. Money plays a major role in the story, as a symbol of power and social status. The way Mary Postgate deals with money-related issues is also significant. For example, Wynn Fowler demands an increase in his allowance. "Miss Fowler, who always looked facts in the face, said, 'He must have it. The chances are he won't live long to draw it, and if three hundred makes him happy -- " Here, money is a source of personal empowerment but Kipling adds the ironic twist by having Miss Fowler state that "he won't live long to draw it," and that Wynn would also be happy with a pittance just for...
Some -- give trouble for half a year (Kipling)." The above passage is clear and plain as it describes deaths by heart attacks that are sudden, accidents that are sudden and death by illness in which the person slowly dies. In another passage Kipling illuminates the fact that just as there are many different personalities among the living, there are also many different personalities among the dying and how they choose to
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