New Straits Times

KIPLING’S VAIN SEARCH FOR LOST SON

British author did everything to send his son to fight in World War 1

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BRITISH poet and writer Rudyard Kipling, an ardent supporter of his country’s entry into World War 1, did everything he could to make sure his only son would join the fight.

Yet just a few weeks after John Kipling touched French soil on the day of his 18th birthday, he was reported missing during the devastatin­g Battle of Loos on Sept 27, 1915.

His father and mother, Carrie, would spend the next several years desperatel­y searching for him, hoping against all odds that he might have survived.

It was not until 1919 that Kipling acknowledg­ed his son was probably dead, one of the 1.1 million soldiers lost by the British Empire in the war.

The author of The Jungle Book, the first Briton to be awarded the Nobel Prize for literature, fiercely defended the war as a patriotic duty for all able-bodied men.

He threw himself into the government’s propaganda efforts, and is believed to have popularise­d the slur “Hun” in reference to the German foe.

But John, who hoped to enlist in the Royal Navy, was rejected because of poor eyesight.

“As his wife said: How could their son not go to war when all the other sons were?” said David A. Richards, who published a bibliograp­hy of the author’s work. It was only thanks to his father’s connection­s as one of the country’s most popular writers that he finally got a commission in the Irish Guards, and shipped out to France in August 1915.

Shortly afterwards came the Battle of Loos, which proved a disaster for Britain as waves of soldiers were cut down by German machine guns, or choked on their own poison gas being blown back into their lines.

It was John’s first combat, and he disappeare­d after “going over the top” — leaving the trenches to attack enemy lines.

From that day on, Kipling moved heaven and earth to find out what happened to his son.

Rudyard spent months tracking down members of his regiment to try to learn where John was last seen. He even managed to have leaflets dropped over enemy lines asking for news of his son.

“He begged the War Office not to declare the boy dead, only missing, to spare his wife’s feelings,” Richards said.

Kipling would return repeatedly to the French battlefiel­ds hoping to learn his son’s fate until his death in 1936.

But it was only in 1992 that John’s grave was finally identified at St Mary’s cemetery in Haisnes, near the battlefiel­d where he disappeare­d.

His name has since replaced the inscriptio­n “Known unto God” — a phrase suggested by Rudyard himself to the Imperial War Graves Commission.

“After the war, Rudyard’s writing took on a serious tone, including stories about soldiers suffering from what we would now call posttrauma­tic stress disorder,” according to Mike Kipling, one of the author’s descendant­s and chairman of the Kipling Society.

In 1916, he would write the haunting lines of My Boy Jack: “Have you news of my boy... What comfort can I find?”

Whether a sign of his own regrets or criticism of those responsibl­e for the carnage, Rudyard would later write in his Epitaphs of the War: “If any question why we died, Tell them, because our fathers lied.”

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 ??  ?? John Kipling
John Kipling
 ??  ?? Rudyard Kipling
Rudyard Kipling

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