last time is bright light made." Unlike his obvious models in verse, from Praed to Belloc, from Charles Dibdin to George Grossmith, Betjeman must be read attentively; he crossed and recrossed continuously the border between verse and poetry. He took no step into modernism.
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Betjeman's atavistic employment of the stanzaic patterns familiar from popular comic verse goes far to explain why John Murray could sell more than one hundred thousand copies of the Collected Poems of 1958. In "Preface to High and Low " (1966) Betjeman praised the English language for "such range, / Such rhymes and half-rhymes, rhythms strange, / And such variety of tone, / It is a music of its own." He offers in evidence Milton, Cowper, Wordsworth, Tennyson, and Dowson, but his practice caps, for now, the tradition of popular English balladry.
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| Friedman, Albert B. The Ballad Revival: Studies the Influence of Popular on Sophisticated Poetry . Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1961.
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| Gerould, Gordon Hall. The Ballad of Tradition . Oxford: Clarendon, 1932.
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| Noakes, Vivien. Edward Lear: The Life of a Wanderer . London: Collins, 1968.
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| Pinto, Vivian de Sola, and A. E. Rodway, eds. The Common Muse: An Anthology of Popular British Ballad Poetry . London: Chatto & Windus, 1957.
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| Sargent, Helen Child, and George Lyman Kittredge, eds. English and Scottish Popular Ballads . Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1904.
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| Sewell, Elizabeth. The Field of Nonsense . London: Chatto & Windus, 1952.
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| Shepard, Leslie. The Broadside Ballad: A Study in Origins and Meaning . London: Jenkins, 1962.
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| Shepard, Leslie. The History of Street Literature . Detroit: Singing Tree Press, 1973.
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| Vicinus, Martha. The Industrial Muse . London: Croom Helm; New York: Barnes & Noble, 1974.
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