A CONFERENCE OF THE POWERS by RUDYARD KIPLING
1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales
Jon Hagadorn
4.5 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 3 May 2026
⏱️ 33 minutes
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Summary
The story (Summary by The Kipling Society) at 1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales
"I" tells this story, in which his rooms in London (Kipling lived during this time in rooms in Villiers Street, next to Charing Cross Station) are the setting for a chance meeting of an eminent English writer Eustace Cleever (or 'Cleaver' in the footnote to "Slaves of the Lamp — II" in Stalky & Co.) with three young army officers just arrived on leave in London from service in India and Burma, 'Tick' Boileau, Nevin, and 'The Infant', an impressively large young man.
The three have read and deeply admired Cleever's book, set in the Infant's county ('all my people live there'), and their enthusiastic questioning leads Cleever to drop from the manner of 'the pundit caste' into colloquial speech — and to realize that, much as he knows of the English countryside and country people, he knows nothing of the Subaltern of the Line.
As they begin to tell him a little, he remarks: 'the whole idea of warfare seems so foreign and unnatural, so essentially vulgar . . . ' "I" explains quickly that all three have 'seen service' which leads to Cleever's demanding that they tell him about it. Whereupon the Infant tells the story of his campaign against murderous dacoits in the Burmese jungle, an assault on a village, and the capture of Boh Na-ghee the dacoit leader. Cleever is delighted, and accompanies the three young men when they leave to dine out and go on to the Empire Music-Hall. They return great friends, and on leaving, Cleever quotes Thomson to "I" to the effect that life is greater than art: 'Whereupon I understood that Eustace Cleever, decorator and colourman in words, was blaspheming his own Art, and would be sorry for this in the morning.'
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome back, everyone to 1001 classic short stories and tales. |
| 0:17.7 | This is your host, John Haggardorn. |
| 0:20.0 | Tonight's story comes from a writer who understood |
| 0:22.1 | empire, ambition, and human nature better than almost anyone of his age. Rudyard Kipling, |
| 0:28.7 | the Nobel Prize-winning author whose sharp eye and sharper pen captured the machinery of the |
| 0:33.4 | British Empire from the inside out. And now, a conference of the powers by Rudyard Kipling. |
| 0:41.8 | Life liveth but in life, and doth not roam to other lands, if all be well at home, solid as ocean foam, |
| 0:49.9 | quote, ocean foam. The room was blue with the smoke of three pipes and a cigar. |
| 0:56.3 | The leave season had opened in India, |
| 0:59.0 | and the first fruits on this side of the water were |
| 1:01.4 | Tick Boulogh of the 45th Bengal cavalry, |
| 1:05.2 | who called on me, after three years' absence, |
| 1:07.7 | to discuss old things which had happened. |
| 1:11.0 | Fate, who always does her work handsomely, sent up the same staircase with the same hour, |
| 1:16.6 | the infant, fresh from Upper Burma, and he and Boulog, looking out of my window, saw walking in |
| 1:22.5 | the street one Nevin, late in a Gorka regiment which had been through the Black Mountain |
| 1:27.4 | expedition. |
| 1:28.8 | They yelled to him to come up, and the whole street was aware that they desired him to come up, |
| 1:33.5 | and he came up, and there followed pandemonium in my room, because we had foregathered from the |
| 1:38.3 | ends of the earth, and three of us were on a holiday, and none of us were 25, and all the |
| 1:43.9 | delights of |
| 1:44.6 | all London lay waiting our pleasure. |
... |
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