John Betjeman
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Standard Name: Betjeman, John
JB
was a writer of popular, plangent, often nostalgic poems, who served as Poet Laureate from 1969. He also published an autobiography in blank verse, a novel about a teddy bear, and books and articles on architecture.
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Occupation | Frances Horovitz | Patrick Magee
, Harvey Hall
, Stevie Smith
, Hugh Dickson
, and Basil Jones
were the other readers for the project. The poets from whose work they read included W. B. Yeats
, D. H. Lawrence |
Publishing | Iris Tree | Poet John Betjeman
wrote a short biographical introduction for the poem, in which he refers to its having been passed around privately before publication. Story has it that the book was finally published at the... |
Reception | Kathleen Raine | She stood as a candidate for election as Professor of Poetry at Oxford
in 1968, but was unsuccessful. (Four years later John Betjeman
told her that she would have been a better choice for Poet... |
Reception | Philip Larkin | PL
declined the poet laureateship, which was offered him after John Betjeman
died (on 19 May 1984), on the grounds that he was no longer a practising poet. His many honorary doctorates included those with... |
Textual Features | Philip Larkin | |
Textual Production | Iris Tree | John Betjeman
(who became Poet Laureate in 1972) writes in his introduction to IT
's long poem The Marsh Picnic, 1966, that she had published another volume of poems in 1919 under the title... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | G. B. Stern | She begins by quoting in its entirety Robert Browning
's poem entitled Memorabilia, which as she observes is better known by its opening line, Ah, did you once see Shelley
plain? qtd. in Stern, G. B. . And did he stop and speak to you?. Henry Regnery, 1958. prelims |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Philip Larkin | The central subject is the period which saw the rise of modernism and its assimilation—or not—into the native English tradition, Motion, Andrew. Philip Larkin: A Writer’s Life. Faber and Faber, 1993. 502 |
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