The Song of Songs
- Year:
- 1933
- 90 min
- 126 Views
Wind's from the south.
Gonna rain.
Tonight, maybe.
Don't you worry.
I'll take care
of your father's grave.
Train's coming soon.
I was in Berlin once.
Thirty years ago.
Big place.
No end to it.
Well, Lily...
go to church every Sunday,
and obey your aunt.
She's all you got.
Yes, she's the last.
Well, then...
goodbye.
Thank you, Miss.
Are you Lily?
Yes, Tante Rasmussen.
Did you have to arrive
in the middle of the night?
The train doesn't leave
until 7:
00 in the evening.Huh. Well, haven't you got a kiss
for your old aunt?
There, there, there,
there, there, there, there, now.
Let's have a look at you.
I'd forgotten people wore clothes
like that.
- What have you got there?
- My things.
Well, bring 'em here.
I'm going to give you
my daughters' room-
My ungrateful,
unnatural daughters...
who deserted
their old mother.
But I tore them
out of my heart.
I've torn them out
by the roots.
And all my love
shall be for you.
Not as my niece, no.
As my own child.
Yes, Tante Rasmussen.
Why, what's this?
- A Bible?
- It was his.
Is that all your scamp
of a father left you, a Bible?
He wasn't a scamp.
He was a good man.
I don't know
what he was good for.
Leaving you a charge
on your old aunt.
However, he taught you to read.
That's something.
Maybe you'll be of some use
about the shop after all.
My father was a good man.
Every night I read to him
from this Bible.
The Lamentations of Job,
no doubt.
No. The Song of Solomon.
He loved it best.
I don't remember
the Song of Solomon...
but knowing your father,
I imagine there was something dirty in it.
The Song of Songs
is beautiful.
That's more than I can say
for your get-up.
- He was a good man.
- All right, all right.
He was a good man.
Take that black pancake
off your head...
and climb out
of that shroud.
See if these
will fit you.
They belonged to Anna.
- Have you had your supper?
- I'm not hungry, thanks.
Good. Then you might
as well go to bed.
And in the morning I'll start
teaching you about the books.
I'll lock up tonight,
but after this you'll do it.
Yes, Tante Rasmussen.
We open the shop at 6:00
and breakfast is at 7:00.
And you'll have a good home here
if you behave.
But you might as well understand
right now I'll tolerate no nonsense.
No, Tante Rasmussen.
Mercy! How many
of those things do you wear?
What, another?
I've never seen a girl
unpeel herself like an onion before.
This is the last.
A figure like that will get you
into trouble if you're not careful.
You'll bear watching.
Go to bed.
Goodnight.
My precious brother.
Isn't it like him?
Dies and leaves me
his daughter...
with nine petticoats
and a Bible.
Does he leave any money?
Not a pfennig.
A daughter and a Bible.
Always was a restless,
good-for-nothing, no-account chap.
"By night on my bed...
"I sought him...
"whom my soul loveth.
"I sought him,
but I found him not.
"I will rise now...
"and go about the city.
"In the streets
and in the broad ways...
"I will seek him
whom my soul loveth.
I will seek him
whom my soul loveth."
- Are you looking for a book, sir?
- What?
I said, are you
looking for a book?
Well, I'll tell you.
When a man goes into a book shop...
he's usually
looking for a book.
Of course, he might be looking
for the fountain of youth...
but I don't think
you sell that.
I meant, is there some special book
you're looking for?
Ha!
There is nothing special.
Everything is just the same
as everything else.
Well, I'm afraid
I can't help you.
No. No, I'm afraid
you can't.
Oh!
No. No, no!
Stand up again.
- Stand up. I want to see you.
- No, I will not.
Oh, I see. You think
I'm interested in your legs.
Well, I'm not-
at least, not just as legs.
My dear child, if you'd seen
as many legs as I have...
you'd get more excited
about a pair of crutches.
I'm a sculptor, my dear,
a sculptor-
or that is,
I'm supposed to be...
and there was something
about you as you stood there that-
that was almost an idea.
Are you the sculptor
that lives across the street?
I'm the sculptor
that's going crazy across the street!
Why? What's the matter?
- I'm stuck.
- Stuck?
- Yes. Stuck.
- You mean- You mean-
- I mean I'm stuck.
- Yes, I know, but-
Oh, don't say you know
and then say "but."
If you can't talk straight,
don't talk at all.
Now, come on, please.
Stand up.
This is a book store...
and if you don't want
to buy a book...
then better go back and-
and be stuck.
I don't have to go back.
I'm just as stuck here. That's the trouble.
The trouble is,
you're probably no good anyway.
Ho! Do you know,
I never thought of that.
I tell you what.
You come over
and pose for me.
- Perhaps you'll bring me inspiration.
- No, thank you.
- How about 8:
00, hmm?- I wouldn't wait, if I were you.
Oh, no, no, no.
But you must come.
You know, I believe I could
get something really interesting.
Oh-Oh, please come.
Please come, won't you?
- You must be crazy.
- Well, what's that got to do with it?
I don't know you.
Well, I don't know you either,
but I've got to sculpt you.
Now, when will you come?
Tonight?
Certainly not.
You know, really,
I should have thought...
that living here as you do,
among all these marvellous books...
you would have had
some sympathy for art.
If you'll come,
I'll buy a book.
- Oh, you will?
- I-I'll even read the blessed thing.
It's no use. I couldn't-
- I shall expect you.
- You are crazy.
- Tonight at 8:
00.- Please go away.
- Oh, please come. Please come.
- Never.
Well, I shall expect you.
Auf Wiedersehen.
What did he want?
Oh, nothing.
- Didn't he take a book?
- No. He was just looking.
Well, you get on with your work. And don't you
let me catch you carrying on with any young men.
No, Tante Rasmussen.
Come in.
Come in, come in.
I don't believe it!
I only came to-
Oh, never mind
why you came.
You're here,
that's the main thing.
Oh, come in, come in.
It was wrong of me to come.
It was charming-
charming of you.
Here. Here,
let me take this.
If Tante Rasmussen
should find out-
You know, I believe you're scared of her.
Well, so am I.
Are you still stuck?
Well, I was, but hope
has come in now, hasn't she?
I've been making
a sketch of you.
- You want to see yourself?
- Oh, yes!
- Oh! I haven't any clothes on!
- Clothes?
with their clothes on?
But how did you know
I was like that?
And just what
does that mean?
I mean it is me and-and it isn't me.
I mean it's-
Go on. This begins to sound like
art criticism of the highest order.
Oh, it's wonderful.
I mean, it's the way
I want to be.
- It's me as I dream of me.
- Oh, ho.
It's the girl
in the Song of Songs.
- Who?
- The girl in the Song of Songs.
- She's in the Bible.
- The Bible?
She's the girl who
feels in her heart...
that somewhere the perfect love
is waiting for her.
She says, "I sleep,
but my heart waketh.
"It is the voice
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"The Song of Songs" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_song_of_songs_18511>.
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