|
(1902) (Notes by Mary Hamer) |
the poem
|
During his own lifetime, such was the part he had played in opening up the southern parts of Africa to development, and in extending British dominions there, Cecil Rhodes saw his name given to an entire country, Rhodesia. He dreaded lest that choice of name should not endure. Rhodes’s early death from heart failure took place on March 26 1902 out at his beach cottage in Muizenberg. At the time, Kipling and his family were visiting South Africa and living in The Woolsack, a house on the Rhodes estate, one which had been specially refurbished for their use. A brilliant and unscrupulous financier and developer, Rhodes was also a man driven to create an effect of irresistible charisma; Kipling and Carrie his wife had fallen completely under his spell.