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The Man Who Would Be King
At the start of The Man Who Would Be King, Rudyard Kipling sets the reader up for a fallen king and inevitable failure of empire. ... This objectivity makes it easier for the reader to discern the chain of events that leads to the fall of the King. ... Throughout the story these two use dialect that seems unbefitting to that of a king, using words like “impidence” and “contrack” words that support the uneducated aspects of these characters. ... This reveals the idea of the femme fatale, the idea that only a woman could bring down a king.
Approximate Word count = 642 Approximate Pages = 2.6 (250 words per page double spaced)
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