The Kiplings and India: A Collection of Writings from British India, 1870-1900

Way Down the Ravi River (Rudyard Kipling)


 I WANDERED by the riverside,

To gaze upon the view,

And watched the Alligator glide

After the dead Hindoo,

Who stank and sank beneath the tide,

Then rose and stank anew.

The evening dews were falling fast,

The damp, unwholesome dew ;

The river rippled 'neath the blast,

The black crow roostward flew;

And swift the Alligator passed

In chase of his Hindoo.

And, from the margin of the tide,

I watched the twain that fled —

The Alligator, scaly- thighed,

Close pressed the flying dead,

Who gazed, with eyeballs opened wide,

Upward, but nothing said.

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