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The Arrow River is a legendary feature of the tales of the Buddha, a stream that sprang up where an arrow he had shot fell to the earth. It was said that that river provided the forgiveness of sins, enlightenment, and liberation from bondage to the Wheel of Things. The river thus represents the goal of the lama’s journey, and as such, it is primarily associated with the lama. Kim also is engaged in the quest to find the river, but more from a sense of devotion to the lama than for the river’s own sake. The river symbolizes an ultimate pursuit, the end goal of the spiritual journey toward which everything is oriented. In this sense, it forms something of a contrast to the symbol of the road, in the way that an end is contrasted to the means.
The search for the river features large in the early section, particularly in Chapters 3 and 4, where Kim and the lama inspect every stream and canal that they come across to see if it might be their river. By the book’s final section, the river has been spiritualized in the lama’s mind. Whereas before, he appeared to have been looking for a physical, identifiable river, in the end, he is expecting a miracle: a river that will break forth from before their very feet once they are ready to encounter it. In his final description, the lama relates a mystical experience of enlightenment, allowing him to perceive the river, not the other way around. The river is revealed not to be the goal itself but the reward for having reached the goal of enlightenment.
While the river is a symbol associated with the lama, the road is a symbol connected with Kim. The goal-oriented nature of looking for the river drove the lama onwards, but for Kim, it is the daily experience of life on the road that appeals to him. He loved the beauty and wonder of seeing all of India laid out before him as they walked along their way. If the river symbolizes the end, the road symbolizes the journey itself, opening up new experiences and lessons to the traveler along the way.
Not only does Kim take delight in the experience of walking the road with the lama, but he also runs back to the road as if to a refuge when he wants to get away from his boarding school. Of that episode, Kipling declares that “in all India […] was no human being so joyful as Kim” (109). When the time of his schooling is done, the road once again is the place that welcomes Kim back: he resumes his journey with the lama, this time with the encouragement of his mentors in the intelligence agency. There is no place in the book that could be described as Kim’s home (not even his starting point in Lahore, because he never returns there), but the road itself comes as close to that function as anything else does for Kim. The road also fits symbolically with Kim’s journey of questioning his identity. He mulls over the question of who he is, but he never truly arrives at a destination. The road itself is his home, not any particular place, culture, or religion.
Amulets appear as symbols in two significant instances in Kim. First is the amulet that Kim wears in the opening sequence of chapters, containing the documents his father left to him. This first amulet thus bears his identifying marks as a European, contrasting with his outward appearance as a Hindu boy. For Kim personally, the amulet also reminds him of the prophecy he had been told from his father’s words: that a Red Bull and a colonel on a horse would one day come for him. Thus, the first amulet represents both an identifier (his ethnicity) and a hope for the future (his father’s prophecy).
The second amulet is given to Kim in Chapter 10 when Mahbub Ali and the Babu prepare him for his work as a spy. Along with other preparations, Kim is given an amulet to wear and a set of code phrases to use as communication. The amulet is an identifying mark of members of the intelligence agency, and the code phrases could be used to verify that identity (as Kim did with agent E23 in Chapter 11). The second amulet carries the same symbolic weight as the first: it is a marker of identity (as a spy) and represents his future hopes to gain a full posting as a spy within the agency.
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