Kipling's poem "Fuzzy-Wuzzy" praises the
Hadendoa for their martial prowess, because "for all the odds agin' you, Fuzzy-Wuz, you
broke the square". This could refer to either or both historical battles between the British and
Mahdist forces where British infantry squares were "broken". The first was at the
Battle of Tamai, on 13 March 1884, and the second was on 17 January 1885 during the
Battle of Abu Klea (when the square was badly broken, though thereafter promptly reformed). Kipling's narrator, an infantry soldier, speaks in admiring terms of the "Fuzzy-wuzzys", praising their bravery which, although insufficient to defeat the British, did at least enable them to boast of having "broken the square"—an achievement which few other British foes could claim. Writing in
The Atlantic in June 2002,
Christopher Hitchens noted "[Yet] where Kipling excelled—and where he most deserves praise and respect—was in enjoining the British to avoid the very hubris that he had helped to inspire in them. His
'Recessional' is only the best-known and most hauntingly written of many such second thoughts. ... There is also 'The Lesson', a poem designed to rub in the experience of defeat in Africa, 'Fuzzy-Wuzzy', a tribute to the fighting qualities of the Sudanese."
Benjamin Britten adapted the poem for his song of the same name between 1922 and 1923, and it was further revised in 1968. It remains unpublished. ==Other references==