and
Beacon cinemas, Boston; part of
Great American Authors film series In
The Silence of the Lambs by
Thomas Harris,
Clarice Starling reveals to
Hannibal Lecter one detail of her father's last days in a hospital: an elderly neighbour reading to him the last lines of "Thanatopsis." In
Sinclair Lewis' novel
Main Street, the women's study club of Gopher Prairie is the Thanatopsis club. The experimental band Thanatopsis (featuring
Buckethead and
Travis Dickerson) was named after this poem. The band's first album,
Thanatopsis, was also named after this poem. The electronic artist
Daedelus named the last song on the album
Exquisite Corpse after the poem. The Thanatopsis Pleasure and Inside Straight Club, or Thanatopsis Chowder and Marching Society, or the Young Men’s Upper West Side Thanatopsis Literary and Inside Straight Poker Club, were all used as names for a certain poker game that was first formed in Paris during the First World War in the back room at Nini’s. The New Yorker founder Harold Ross, Ring Lardner, Alexander Woollcott, Grantland Rice, and F. P. Adams were among the original players. This poker club later re-emerged in NYC when these and other literary figures began meeting at the Algonquin Hotel, where they would play upstairs- before the round table downstairs was eventually ceded to meet the needs of a larger group than the poker game could contain. The Avant Garde film-maker
Ed Emshwiller's 1962 short film
Thanatopsis was inspired by the poem. In the
Space Ghost Coast to Coast episode "Terminal," a portion of the poem is set to folk music and sung by writer/producer
Dave Willis. In 1934,
Scott Bradley composed an
oratorio based on
Thanatopsis. In the 1942 film
Grand Central Murder, the private railway car where the showgirl is murdered is named Thanatopsis. In 1942, the night before his execution by a Japanese firing squad,
United States Army Air Corps pilot
William G. Farrow referenced the poem in a letter he wrote to his mother. He had been captured after flying a
B-25 Mitchell bomber on the
Doolittle Raid on Tokyo. He told her, "Read
Thanatopsis by Bryant if you want to know how I am taking this. My faith in God is complete, so I am unafraid." The American author of detective fiction
Phoebe Atwood Taylor has her hero Leonidas Witherall recount the first lines in her 1947 book
The Iron Clew. The poem is also mentioned in Taylor's 1934 book
The Mystery of the Cape Cod Tavern as having been part of an obituary. The seminal conservationist
Aldo Leopold quoted several passages from
Thanatopsis in his posthumously published essay "Some Fundamentals of Conservation in the Southwest." In
August Wilson's 2003 play
Gem of the Ocean, Solly offers the final nine lines of the poem ("So live . . . pleasant dreams") as a toast to send off Citizen Barlow to the city of bones. Eli joins Solly in the recitation, offering his own interpretation of the lines: "You die by how you live." The
Acacia fraternity adopted the last stanza as their code. Cindy Williams reads from
Thanatopsis in
Andy Kaufman's ABC-TV special aired in 1979. In the 2020 film
Driveways,
Jerry Adler's character quotes the poem as a sudden memory from his childhood; a sign he has dementia. ==References==