OUT OF AFRICA Movie POEMS
The screenwriter, Kurt Luedtke, included the following fragments of poems in his Academy Award-winning filmscript from 1985.
From THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)
(Note: Denys Finch Hatton loved this poem. The lines "He
prayeth
well, who loveth well /Both man and bird and beast" appear on
commemorative
brass plaques, once placed by Denys Finch Hatton's brother Toby on the
obelisk at Denys's tomb in the Ngong Hills, and still found in Ewerby
Church,
Lincolnshire, England. In the flyleaf of the copy of the poem owned by
Karen Blixen, Denys drew a picture of a rhinoceros. This drawing is
reproduced
in Isak Dinesen's Letters from Africa, page 140.)
�
Farewell, farewell, but this I tell /To thee, thou Wedding
Guest: /He
prayeth well, who loveth well /Both man and bird and beast."
�
From A SHROPSHIRE LAD: XIX TO
AN ATHLETE DYING YOUNG by A. E. Housman (1859-1936).
�
Smart lad, to slip betimes away /From fields where glory does not stay /And early though the laurel grows /It withers quicker than the rose...
Now you will not swell the rout /Of lads that wore their honours out, /Runners whom renown outran /And the name died before the man...
And round that early-laurelled head /Will flock to gaze the strengthless dead, /And find unwithered on its curls /The garland briefer than a girl's."
(Note: A play, "The Invention of Love" by Tom Stoppard, examines the life of A. E. Housman. The play opened in London in 1998 and in Philadelphia in February, 2000.)
The (fictional)script written for the movie gives Meryl Streep the further comments:
"Now take back the soul of Denys George Finch Hatton, whom You have shared with us. He brought us joy...we loved him well.
He was not ours.
He was not mine."
�
From OUT OF AFRICA by Isak Dinesen (1885-1962), chapter
titled "Kamante and Lulu," page 83:
�
A. E. Housman (1859-1936).� A Shropshire Lad. 1896.
�������������������� LIV. With rue my heart is laden
�����������������������
WITH
rue
my heart is laden
�������������������������
For
golden
friends I had,
�����������������������
For
many
a rose-lipt maiden
�������������������������
And
many
a lightfoot lad.
�����������������������
By
brooks
too broad for leaping
�������������������������
The
lightfoot
boys are laid;
�����������������������
The
rose-lipt
girls are sleeping
�������������������������
In
fields
where roses fade.
Enjoy Out of Africa's True Story by Linda Donelson.
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Supported misspellings: karen blixon, karin, isaac, isak dineson, isak denison, dinison, dinisen, denesen, dinnison, dennison, dinnisen, coolsong, donaldson