Out of Africa
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:28:02
What's happened to the cows, the dairy?
:28:04
We changed our minds.
We'll grow coffee instead.

:28:07
- A bit risky, this high.
- So I've been told.

:28:10
- Didn't seem to bother you.
- I think they just haven't tried.

:28:14
Every time I turn my back,
it wants to go wild again.

:28:17
It will go wild.
:28:24
- Your man--
- Kanuthia.

:28:27
- He's not Kikuyu.
- No.

:28:31
Shall I see
that he's given supper?

:28:33
Don't do anything
for him, thank you, Baroness.

:28:37
It's true of all Somalis. They're
the only tribe that knows horses.

:28:40
They don't drink, charge interest
or chase other men's wives.

:28:46
Got to go to town for that.
:28:52
Did you know that
in all of literature...

:28:54
there's no poem
celebrating the foot.

:28:57
There's lips, eyes, hands, face...
:29:00
hair, breasts...
:29:02
legs, arms,
even the knees.

:29:04
But not one verse
for the poor foot.

:29:08
- Why do you think that is?
- Priorities, I suppose.

:29:12
Did you think
you would make one?

:29:14
Problem is there's nothing
to rhyme it with.

:29:16
- Put.
- It's not a noun.

:29:18
Doesn't matter.
Along he came and he did put...

:29:21
upon my farm his clumsy foot.
:29:29
We should have a story now.
:29:35
When I tell a story
to my nieces at home...

:29:38
one of them always provides
the first sentence.

:29:43
- Anything?
- Absolutely anything.

:29:49
There was a wandering Chinese
named Cheng Huan...

:29:56
living in Limehouse...
:29:59
and a girl named Shirley.

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