Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Wireless (short story)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Language
  
English

Genre
  
Short story

Author
  
Rudyard Kipling

Country
  
United Kingdom

Wireless (short story)

Similar
  
The Sweepers, The Mother Hive, The King's Pilgrimage, His Wedded Wife, The Taking of Lungtungpen

"Wireless" is a short story by Rudyard Kipling. It was first published in Scribner’s Magazine in 1902, and was later collected in Traffics and Discoveries. The sister-poem accompanying it, Butterflies or Kaspar's Song in Varda, Kipling claimed to have been a translation of an old Swedish poem (from the Swedish of Stagnelius), although this claim is unsubstantiated.

Contents

Plot

The narrator (Kipling) is visiting a chemist friend who is experimenting, with short-wave radio. He is attempting to make contact with another enthusiast, several miles distant. They are passing a restless night, concocting the most marvelous cocktails from the chemicals at hand, and the narrator succeeds in drugging Mr Shaynor, the chemist’s assistant, who is suffering from last stage consumption.

Shaynor has all the night been expressing his approval of a certain young lady in a toilet-water advertisement, and as he slips into a trance, he begins to indite poetry towards her. To the narrator's surprise, he begins to compose a poem of Keats; instead of merely writing the lines, he is in all the agonies of composition, and occasionally, in Kipling's opinion, improving on the poet. The poem is The Eve of St. Agnes; in one instance Shaynor takes the "trite" line

(line 218) and changes it to

which Kipling considers a change for the better. It seems to him that by the atmosphere auspicious for radio contact, Shaynor has somehow managed to connect with Keats, and the lines he writes are "the raw material...whence Keats wove the twenty-sixth, seventh, and eighth stanzas of his poem."

Criticism

Some were critical of the story, saying it was "too full of crowded detail which, as it is structural, cannot be eliminated."

References

Wireless (short story) Wikipedia