Rudyard Kipling's descendants include his three children: Josephine, Elsie, and John, as well as his grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Some of his relatives are likely alive today, though specific information on current living relatives may be private.
he lived in India but then was departed to England to live there with his Father.
Yes, he not only travelled there, he also lived in Vermont from 1892 to 1896.
Rudyard Kipling summed it best: "The strength of the pack is the wolf, and the strength of the wolf is the pack."
Rudyard Kipling lived in India from his birth in 1865 until 1889, when he left to pursue his writing career in England. He returned to visit India a few times after that but did not live there permanently again.
Rudyard Kipling was sent to a foster family in England when he was 6 years old because his parents, who were living in India, wanted him to receive a formal British education. This decision was made to ensure he would have better opportunities for his future.
That there must be a certain respect for every species. Sort of a live and let live theme.
Elsie Kipling was 80 years old when she died, not 90 as stated on this site.
He was an author - and lived from 30 December 1865 to 18 January 1936. See related link to Wikipedia for a comprehensive article on his life.
When Rudyard Kipling was 5 years old, he was sent from India to England to live with a foster family. This separation from his parents had a lasting impact on him, shaping his later writings about themes of colonization, identity, and displacement.
Rikki is a fictional character from the short story "Rikki-Tikki-Tavi" by Rudyard Kipling. In the story, Rikki lives in the garden of a British colonial family's bungalow in India.
Kipling was a British child born in India. His mother wanted him to get an English education so she sent him to live in England when he was six. The woman that took care of Rudyard was a very mean person. She took away his books and he had to sneak books into his room and read them while pretending to play. Finally someone told his mother how he was being treated and she took him away from that home and put him in a new school where he started to write and worked on the school newspaper.