「Kipling」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Kipling

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:115件

  • e story "The Disturber of Traffic" by Rudyard Kipling, a character called Fenwick misrenders the Or
  • er Hive" is a short story or fable by Rudyard Kipling about the decline and destruction of a hive o
  • Kipling Acres - Etobicoke
  • hose words appear in the work include Rudyard Kipling, Alfred Lord Tennyson, and Sankichi Toge, who
  • Kipling also wrote The Jungle Books, A Day's Work, an
  • responses from Theodore Roosevelt and Rudyard Kipling, among others.
  • Kipling and Orientalism ISBN 978-0709935056
  • They stop just outside the station on both Kipling and Belfield.
  • The 44 Kipling and the 110 Islington routes connect to the B
  • Kipling and Byron House also incorporated a row of sh
  • poem is influenced by the ballads of Rudyard Kipling and was often parodied, most famously by Bill
  • lished in 1877 influenced the work of Rudyard Kipling and inspired many scenes in the Jungle Book.
  • It examines how grief affected Rudyard Kipling and his family following the death of his son
  • duced studies on Henry Rider Haggard, Rudyard Kipling and other Victorian subjects, as well as chil
  • -ground of the novelist, and the field of Mr. Kipling and Mrs. Steel is this week re-occupied by Mr
  • by authors such as Tennessee Williams Rudyard Kipling and Arthur Miller, it has shown a particular
  • Sirte, where her guns hit two destroyers, HMS Kipling and HMS Sikh, inflicting minor damage on them
  • In September 2008, Mr Kipling announced the Big French Fancy, a large cake
  • He edited the works of Rudyard Kipling, Arthur Conan Doyle, Zane Grey, Joel Chandler
  • Edward Kipling as Marquis de Rotundo
  • iously, the swastika had been used by Rudyard Kipling as a logo on his books.
  • les Dunsterville went to college with Rudyard Kipling at The United Services College, an educationa
  • distinguished SPS members include the Rudyard Kipling, author of The Jungle Book.
  • It is located at 1949 Kipling Avenue at Kipling and Belfield Road, adjacent
  • th, west along Rexdale Boulevard, north along Kipling Avenue North, northwest along the West Branch
  • as Street to the 427 to Burnhamthorpe Road to Kipling Avenue to Mimico Creek to the Canadian Pacifi
  • Kipling Avenue - 501 Kipling
  • ations including: Southern Water, Lewes Road; Kipling Avenue, Woodingdean and University of Brighto
  • Said Westmoreland: “I'm very fond of Kipling because he's a soldier's poet,” but he confes
  • or action-adventure film based on the Rudyard Kipling book, The Jungle Book.
  • the film was keeping too true to the Rudyard Kipling book.
  • the film was keeping too true to the Rudyard Kipling book.
  • Rudyard Kipling, Bourne & Shepherd, c. 1892.
  • ris with the poem "The Broken Men" by Rudyard Kipling: but it is possible that this is one of Eliot
  • a highly ornamental padlock (designed by J.L. Kipling, CIE, Principal of the Mayo School of Art in
  • were originally produced in the UK by the Mr Kipling company.
  • Gwynne's relationship with Kipling continued close throughout the latter's life
  • continued to fight its rearguard action, and [ Kipling] continued to urge Gwynne to take stronger st
  • Milton Berle as Kipling Cooper
  • The Kiplingcotes (also spelled Kipling Cotes) race is the oldest in England having t
  • George Bambridge married Elsie Kipling, daughter of Rudyard Kipling, on October 22,
  • When Kipling died in 1936, Baldwin made a speech attacking
  • Kipling Elementary
  • According to his family, Kipling enjoyed reading aloud stories from Stalky & C
  • ception was at the home of Stanley Baldwin, a Kipling family cousin.
  • e of Loos Jack goes missing in action and the Kipling family is informed by military telegram that
  • e fountains inside, were designed by Lockwood Kipling, father of novelist Rudyard Kipling.
  • When Kipling first went to Bateman's on a house-hunting ex
  • Big Steamers is a poem by Rudyard Kipling, first published in 1911 as one of his twenty
  • It is claimed that Rudyard Kipling frequented the house where he wrote his novel
  • i Prokofiev; lyrics from the works of Rudyard Kipling, Friedrich Nietzsche and Henry Wadsworth Long
  • lune took the British poet and writer Rudyard Kipling from Wellington to Bluff, and then on to Melb
  • Kipling GO Station is a GO Transit railway station al
  • Kipling had named the house after the Naulakha Pavili
  • In 1870 Kipling had been commissioned by the government to to
  • burne, John Galsworthy, Thomas Hardy, Rudyard Kipling, Havelock Ellis, Count Leo Tolstoy, William M
  • A contemporary of Kipling, he was the inspiration for the character of
  • Elsie "Bird" Kipling, his daughter
  • In July 1999, Kipling House and Byron House were demolished in cont
  • Naulakha, also known as Rudyard Kipling House, is a Shingle Style home in Dummerston,
  • isted of three multi-storey blocks of flats - Kipling House, Byron House and Chaucer House.
  • building was completely renovated and renamed Kipling House.
  • Haig played Rudyard Kipling in both stage and screen shows.
  • of Brecht's lifelong indebtedness to Rudyard Kipling in the play's "Song of the Women of Gaa."
  • es show that while Mr. Yeats is far below Mr. Kipling in the treatment of the material to be found
  • These trees are immortalized by Rudyard Kipling in one of his Just So Stories, The Elephant's
  • Mostly enjoyed in the United Kingdom, Mr Kipling is the most popular brand.
  • the 2005 'Easier Access on the TTC' Brochure, Kipling is now wheelchair-accessible, and GO Transit
  • Kipling is an unincorporated community located along
  • The concept origins from a story by R. Kipling: It isn't beauty, so to speak, nor good talk
  • Based on the novel by Rudyard Kipling, it had its world premiere at the Carthay Cir
  • The parents of Rudyard Kipling, John Lockwood Kipling and Alice Macdonald fi
  • referenced online, and were published in the Kipling Journal, UK and the Journal of the Indian Mil
  • d Parodies which included parodies of Rudyard Kipling, Longfellow and Walt Whitman.
  • Kipling married in 1865 and moved with his wife to In
  • d guests included Dickens, Millais, Whistler, Kipling, Monet, Rodin, Degas and Turgenev.
  • Kipling North Station
  • Ben Silverstone first played Jack Kipling on stage, while Daniel Radcliffe took over th
  • second of a set of four war-related verses by Kipling on nautical subjects for which he chose the t
  • age until he was cast in a small role, as Ian Kipling, on All My Children, a daytime soap-opera ser
  • x one does seem a little unusual, the Rudyard Kipling one is what I would consider a well known nic
  • he reason given by MacLear being that neither Kipling or even MacArthur - no one in the history of
  • ournalists and writers including also Rudyard Kipling, Perceval Landon, Julian Ralph and F.W. Buxto
  • This observation suggested the tune for the Kipling poem and made him wonder whether Kipling had
  • The Rt Rev Charles Keith Kipling Prosser (known as Keith; 1897-1954) was the f
  • Instead it ends with Kipling reading the poem My Boy Jack.
  • illiers Street off the Strand in London where Kipling rented rooms from 1889 to 1891.
  • illiers Street off the Strand in London where Kipling rented rooms from 1889 to 1891
  • Remarks on Dr. Kipling s Preface to Beza, part i. 1793, 8vo.
  • On 28 December 1941 Kipling sank the German submarine U-75.
  • One of his opponents, Thomas Kipling, sent extracts to influential clerics.
  • In an article published by the Kipling Society in 1971 it was suggested that "Peters
  • It is connected to the TTC's Kipling station on the Bloor-Danforth subway line whi
  • leading figures of the day, including Rudyard Kipling, Sylvia Pankhurst and Beatrice Webb.
  • writing a controversial biography of Rudyard Kipling that was suppressed by the Kipling family for
  • ooks by many other authors, including Rudyard Kipling, to whom his mother was related.
  • ere was a "Recessional" with words by Rudyard Kipling to music by Herbert Bunning.
  • When composing the musical settings for Kipling's poetry, Bellamy had a theory, shared with m
  • ancies are generally individual sized, the Mr Kipling variety having eight in a box, and encased in
  • Kipling was born in Pickering, North Yorkshire, to Re
  • At that time, Kipling was well known in France, following the succe
  • HMS Kipling was a K-class destroyer of the Royal Navy lai
  • s parents had first met; their daughter Alice Kipling was born in 1868.
  • Rudyard Kipling, Wee Willie Winkie (1988) (ed.)
  • ads through TTC property, GO trains must skip Kipling when the TTC is on strike.
  • red an eloquent and moving speech composed by Kipling, which made reference to the nearby column co
  • He was the uncle of author and poet Rudyard Kipling, who moved to a nearby house (The Elms) in 18
  • Rudyard Kipling, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for literatu
  • many in anecdotal accounts, including Rudyard Kipling, who described the drink as being made "from
  • itish author, poet and Nobel laureate Rudyard Kipling, whose only son had died in the war.
  • Rudyard Kipling, writer.
  • Kipling wrote many of the Just So Stories during his
  • Rudyard Kipling wrote an article, "On the Banks of the Hugli"
  • Kipling wrote some of his finest works here including
  • Kipling wrote it after his beloved son John (called J