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Life, 1890-07-17 · page 6 of 16

Life — July 17, 1890 — page 6: what you’re looking at

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Life — July 17, 1890 — page 6: Life, 1890-07-17

What you’re looking at

# Analysis of Life Magazine Page 20 This page contains two distinct sections: **"Our Fresh Air Fund"** (top left): A charitable fundraising appeal with before/after illustrations showing the impact of fresh air on sickly poor children. The list tracks donations to help underprivileged children from urban tenements experience healthier conditions. **Book Reviews** (bottom): The main content discusses Private Terence Mulvaney, a character from Rudyard Kipling's new volume "Soldiers Three." The review praises Kipling's ability to capture authentic Irish dialect and character quirks. It compares his work favorably to his earlier "Plain Tales from the Hills." **"An Expensive Luxury"** (right illustration): Shows a domestic scene where a woman questions the cost of cream for her table, humorously contrasting with the charitable giving discussed elsewhere on the page. The page juxtaposes philanthropic appeals with literary criticism and domestic humor.

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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

OUR FRESH AIR FUND After THE whole United States has been pretty thoroughly roasted of late, and probably no one class of its citizens has suffered so much from this culinary process as the chikiren of the poor. They cannot help themselves as the rest of us can, and they must suffer, and in many cases lose their little lives, unless those more fortunate in’ this world’s goods come to their aid. Will you not join our rescuing party? Not to everyone comes the opportunity of saving ahuman life by a display of heroism, but here is an opportunity to reach the same end through gener Larchmont Library A Friend. Little Justin E. W. Previ TWF eM. L Sehacaetee, + From King's Daughters, The Golden Circle “or the Fresh Air Fund... Clinton A. Dodge .... For Live's Fresh Air Fund, from S. A. T PL V.B.. HJ. y acknowledged..$: Circulating $ nuuasd 888888 dent of Second CI dren's Aid Society, Prides Crossing. GsGoBE.wc.. x Mabet F. Jackson 2) kab Sis 218888 | 2 | PRIVATE TERENCE MULVANEY AGAIN. T° meet one's old friend, A/u/vancy, again is a pleasure, and there is plenty of him in Rudyard Kipling’s new volume “Soldiers Three” (Lovell). Eight short stories make up this volume, and Widvaney tells four of them in his inimitable dialect, which is very Irish and very funny. He conciliates you with his first sentence, and then you are will- ht for it that J/u/vaney told a solemn truth when Whin Twas a Corp'nl 1 was a divil of a man.” ‘The humorous garrulity of the old man, his fine pride in what he was natured bi ing to fi said able to accomplish in his youth, his good- ging, and the chaff which he gives his younger comrades, Learoyd and Orther/s, are the eccentricities of a really brave man, who no doubt, did greater deeds than any he has recorded. He seems to tell of them for the fun he got out of them, for what was ludicrous in very tragic situa- tions, and especially for the pleasure of entertaining his friends. ‘The essence of Mudvaney's personality is all in one of his bits of reflection at the beginning of a story. “They was great times, I'm ould now; me hide’s wore off in as disconceited me, an’ I'm a married man, tu. But I've had my day, I've had my day, an’ nothin’ can take away the taste av that! Oh, my time past, whin I put me fut through ivry livin’ wan av the Tin Commandmints between Revelly and Lights Out, blew the froth off a pewter, wiped me mustache wid the back av me hand, and slept on ut all as quiet as a little child !" * . * patches; sinthry-go ULVANEY has so easily taken his place among the characters of fiction that must once-on-a-time have been alive, that one half forgets he is only the mouth-piece for a clever writer of tales. Surely this new volume sustains AN EXPENSIVE LUXURY. “IS THIS ALL THE CREAM YER GIVES FER A CENT?” “Do YoU KAPE THE RON IN THE PROICE OF OICE THAT YEZ BE ASKIN’ SUCH A QUESTION? SURE, AN' IF I HADN'T SEEN VEZ HAD A LADY WID YER Tw $80 GINEROUS, SO I WOULDN'T.” all the promise of the earlier, “ Plain Tales from the Hills.” Mr. Kipling can now be called “versatile with safety by those who have a fondness for that epithet—for here is a range of incident and subject that no young writer with poor inventive faculties could produce. From the tales told by AMutvaney to the stories of native Hindu life “In Black and White,” which make up the second part of this collection, is a long way, as writers travel. It is half round the globe of human character, from the Celt to the Orientals, Whether the latter are faithfully interpreted in these stories can only be told by those who have lived among them; but for us who do not know, it is enough that we move among strange places with unheard-of names, catch glimpses of the workings of a new type of mind, and, at the core, find the passions and motives which are common to us all. . . . O catalogue the qualities in these stories which do not please one, is as easy as the expression of any personal taste. One can say that for him they are a little coarse in fibre, altogether masculine, and without a suggestion of the graces of life,—even those that must exist in uncivilized regions. And the author might cap the criticism effectively by saying that ¢Aa? is exactly what they were meant to be, and that from his point-of-view the criticism is the highest praise. Proch. comicbooks.com