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    Child of Storm

    Page 30
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      Mr Rider Haggard and the Public Records (28 July 1911) The Times

      The Farmers' Burden (1 December 1911) The Times

      Egyptian Date Farm. The Financial Aspect (11 October 1912) The Times

      Umslopogaas and Makokel. Sir H. Rider Haggard on Zulu Types (letter) (16 August 1913) The Times

      The Death of Mark Haggard (letter) (10 October 1914) The Times

      On the Land. Old Problems and New Ways. The War—and After. (15 March 1915) The Times

      Soldiers as Settlers. After-War Problem for the Empire (20 August 1915) The Times

      Raids by Air. Zeppelins and Zeppelins (letter) (22 October 1915) The Times

      Women's Work on the Land. A Palliative in Hard Times (letter) (29 November 1915) The Times

      Women on the Land. Town Girls' Unfitness for Farm Work (letter) (9 December 1915) The Times

      Soldiers as Settlers. Sir Rider Haggard's Oversea Mission (2 February 1916) The Times

      Soldiers as Settlers (letter) (7 February 1916) The Times

      Soldier Settlers. The Future of Rural England (letter) (10 February 1916) The Times

      Farewell Luncheon to Sir Rider Haggard (March 1916) United Empire

      Soldier Settlers for the Empire. Offer from Victoria (18 April 1916) The Times

      Sir R Haggard's Tour. Land for Ex-Service Men (22 July 1916) The Times

      Sir H. Rider Haggard's Mission. Land for Ex-Soldiers (1 August 1916) The Times

      Land for Ex-Soldiers. Outline of Sir R. Haggard's Report (12 August 1916) The Times

      Empire Land Settlement Deputation to the Secretary of State for the Colonies and the President of the Board of Agriculture (September 1916) United Empire

      Empire Land Settlement by Sir Rider Haggard (December 1916) United Empire

      A Journey through Zululand by Sir H Rider Haggard (December 1916) The Windsor Magazine

      Mr Wilson's Note. British Publicity (28 December 1916) The Times

      Home Produce (letter) (22 February 1917) The Times

      The Milk Supply (letter) (11 April 1917) The Times

      Corn Production Bill. A National Measure (letter) (13 June 1917) The Times

      A Protest and a Plea. Farmers and Meat (letter) (9 October 1917) The Times

      Pig-Breeding. A Subject for Municipal Enterprise (letter) (22 February 1918) The Times

      The German Colonies. Interests of the Dominions (letter) (5 November 1918) The Times

      Light—More Light! (letter) (19 November 1918) The Times

      A Great American. Tributes to the Late Mr Roosevelt (letter) (8 January 1919) The Times

      Shut the Door (letter) (10 March 1919) The Times

      Population and Housing. Emigration v Birth Control (25 March 1919) The Times

      The Ex-Kaiser (letter) (11 April 1919) The Times

      Empire Birth-Rate. Sir Rider Haggard on Emigration (17 April 1919) The Times

      Ex-Service Men Abroad. Warnings from California (letter) (10 May 1919) The Times

      Edith Cavell (letter) (16 May 1919) The Times

      The Ex-Kaiser. Uncertainties of Trial (letter) (8 July 1919) The Times

      Race Suicide Peril. Western Civilization Threatened (11 October 1919) The Times

      The British Cinema. Production of Reputable Films (letter) (5 November 1919) The Times

      Horrors on the Film. Limits of Publicity (letter) (19 November 1919) The Times

      The British Museum (letter) (24 January 1920) The Times

      Air Exploration and Empire (letter) (7 February 1920) The Times

      The Liberty League. A Campaign Against Bolshevism (letter) (3 March 1920) The Times

      Bolshevist Peril. Counter-Propaganda (4 March 1920) The Times

      The Empire's Vacant Lands. Settlers and the Food Supply (14 April 1920) The Times

      Films and Happy Endings. The Tyranny of a Convention (letter) (21 April 1921) The Times

      Land and its Burdens. Evil of Grinding Taxation (letter) (8 August 1921) The Times

      Boy Emigrants (letter) (31 March 1922) The Times

      Migration and Morals. Declining Birther Rate (7 April 1922) The Times

      Labour Party's Programme. Confiscation and Class Hatred (letter) (28 October 1922) The Times

      Efficient Denmark. Keeping the People on the Land (7 December 1922) The Times

      The Egyptian Find. Tombs of Eighteenth Dynasty Queens (letter) (19 December 1922) The Times

      King Tutankhamen. Reburial in Great Pyramid (letter) (13 February 1923) The Times

      The Norfolk Dispute. A Truce while There is Time (letter) (3 April 1923) The Times

      Rural Post and Telephone. Minister's Reply to Deputation (19 April 1923) The Times

      Liberalism and Land Reform (letter) (1 May 1923) The Times

      Small Holdings. Influence of Heredity (letter) (4 July 1923) The Times

      Agricultural Parcel Post (26 July 1923) The Times

      Country Houses for Sale. Empty East Anglian Mansions (letter) (14 June 1924) The Times

      Plight of Agriculture (24 July 1924) The Times

      Loans From the British Museum (letter) (30 July 1924) The Times

      Zinovieff Letter. Mr MacDonald and a Political Plot (letter) (29 October 1924) The Times

      Two Centuries of Publishing. Tributes to Messrs. Longmans (6 November 1924) The Times

      Imagination and War (26 November 1924) The Times

      Non-Fiction

      Cetywayo and His White Neighbours (1882)

      A Farmer's Year (1899)

      The Last Boer War (1899)

      A Winter Pilgrimage (1901)

      Rural England (1902)

      A Gardener's Year (1905)

      The Poor and the Land (1905)

      Regeneration (1910)

      Rural Denmark (1911)

      The Days of My Life (1926)

      Film Adaptations

      King Solomon's Mines

      This novel has been adapted at least six times. The first version, King Solomon's Mines, directed by Robert Stevenson, premiered in 1937. The best known version premiered in 1950: King Solomon's Mines, directed by Compton Bennett and Andrew Marton, was followed in 1959 by a sequel, Watusi. In 1979 a low-budget version directed by Alvin Rakoff, King Solomon's Treasure, combined both King Solomon's Mines and Allan Quatermain in one story. The 1985 film King Solomon's Mines was a tongue-in-cheek parody of the story, with a 1987 sequel in the same vein, Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold. Around the same time an Australian animated TV film came out, King Solomon's Mines. In 2008 a direct-to-video adaptation, Allan Quatermain and the Temple of Skulls, was released.

      She

      She has been adapted for the cinema at least ten times, and was one of the earliest films to be made, in 1899 as La Colonne de feu (The Pillar of Fire), by Georges Méliès. A 1911 version starred Marguerite Snow, a British-produced version appeared in 1916, and in 1917 Valeska Suratt appeared in a production for Fox which is lost. In 1925 a silent film of She, starring Betty Blythe, was produced with the active participation of Rider Haggard, who wrote the intertitles. This film combines elements from all the books in the series.

      A decade later another cinematic version of the novels was released, featuring Helen Gahagan, Randolph Scott and Nigel Bruce. Unlike the book and the other films, this 1935 version was set in the Arctic, rather than Africa, and depicts the ancient civilisation of the story in an Art Deco style, with music by Max Steiner.

      The 1965 film She was produced by Hammer Film Productions; it starred Ursula Andress as Ayesha and John Richardson as her reincarnated love, with Peter Cushing and Bernard Cribbins as other members of the expedition.

      In 2001 another adaption was released direct-to-video with Ian Duncan as Leo Vincey, Ophélie Winter as Ayesha and Marie Bäumer as Roxane.

      Dawn

      The film Dawn was released in 1917, starring Hubert Carter and Annie Esmond.

      Jess

      This book was filmed in 1912, featuring Marguerite Snow, Florence La Badie and James Cruze, in 1914 with Constance Crawley and Arthur Maude, and in 1917 as Heart and Soul, starri
    ng Theda Bara in the title role.

      Beatrice

      The book was adapted into a 1921 Italian silent drama film called The Stronger Passion, directed by Herbert Brenon and starring Marie Doro and Sandro Salvini.

      Swallow

      The novel was adapted into a 1922 South African film.

      Stella Fregelius

      The book was adapted into a 1921 British film, Stella.

      Moon of Israel

      This novel was the basis of a script by Ladislaus Vajda, for film-director Michael Curtiz in his 1924 Austrian epic known as Die Sklavenkönigin (Queen of the Slaves).

     

     

     



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