Thanks,
Jude. Will look for it next - as I have come to the end of Kipling's story - and am left with a number of unanswered questions.
Wasn't that the perfect parallel,
Pat! The orphaned calf - nurtured by the elephant until he realizes that the elephant is fettered by the leg iron - and sets him free.
The orphan Kim, follows the lama until he realizes that he must now be the strong one if the lama is to reach the healing waters and be freed from his sorrow. This feels familiar - the young caring for aging parents.
I've been thinking of the question concerning Kim's future - after the lama departs this life. The lama seems to be preparing Kim for the near future - by telling him repeatedly that he is a Sahib. Kim is uncomfortable hearing this. "Thou has told me there is neither black nor white. I am not a Sahib, I am thy chela." But the lama insists that is who he is.
I took this as an indication that Kim will find his identity as a Sabib in the future.
When Kim requested the box with a lock - and put away Mahbub's pistol, the letters, books and diaries -
"with a groan of relief"
I saw him locking away his participation in the Great Game. He looked upon that prized box as a
" burden incommunicable"
. Certainly he does not look upon these objects with the same delight the Babu does.
What has happened while Kim was massaged into that long drug-induced sleep?
He
"felt ...that his soul was out of gear with its surroundings."
"I am Kim. I am Kim. And what is Kim?"
What has happened while Kim slept? Has he been abandoned?
What happened to the lama while Kim slept? He has gone on into the wilderness -
alone? Why not wait for Kim?
He found the healing waters - but wait, Babu has fished him out.
As Kim sleeps yet again on the earth, the lama and Mahbub come upon him together. In answer to Mahbub's question, the lama tells him that the pilgrimage will be over that night that he and his chela will be cleansed from sin and then set free from
the Wheel of Things.
Mahbub presses the lama for information about what will happen to Kim once this happens. Lama tells him that Kim will then be enlightened - that he will be a teacher, a scribe. Mahbub agrees with him.
Wasn't that an amusing moment when the lama asks Mahbug to follow the Way himself - and accompany Kim? Maybe later, he says. He leaves.
The lama wakes Kim to tell him that the Search is finished - that it is time for the reward. I would really like to hear how you all understood what had happened to the lama. He had fasted and suddenly his soul loosed itself from his body and became free. It sounded to me as if he had died. Like an eagle from on high, he saw his whole pass life before him. His soul had passed "beyond Space, Time and Things."
But wait - what will become of the boy if he leaves him there alone? He has not yet found the Way.
So he fought his way back - to the River, plunged into it - and cleansed himself - and in so doing, has saved himself - and Kim too.
I can't help but think that Kim still has to save himself. I do see a parallel here to the story of the Redemption of the cross, saving mankind....but am not sure this is what Kipling was saying here. If not this, what was he saying?