The British author lived in Dummerston when he wrote "Rikki-Tikki-Tavi," the story of a mongoose that battled two vicious cobras in far-away India while protecting his human family from harm, said Thomas Pinney, who will give the keynote address Monday at Marlboro College.
He lived there from 1892 to 1896, a time when there was rising anti-British sentiment in the United States. Over time, Kipling soured on the United States, although he continued to like many Americans, said Pinney, a retired professor from California's Pomona College.
Pinney is among about 60 Kipling scholars from the United Kingdom and the US meeting at Marlboro College today and tomorrow. They are viewing some of the college's Kipling holdings, including the contents of a safe deposit box discovered untouched in the early 1990s after almost a century in a Brattleboro bank.
Kipling was attracted to Vermont because of his American wife. Part of the draw for the scholars will be the tomorrow tour of Naulakha, the home he built in the shape of a ship, high on a hill overlooking the Connecticut River.