148:"The Highwayman" is reputed to be "the best ballad poem in existence for oral delivery". It makes use of vivid imagery to describe surroundings ("the road was a gipsy's ribbon, looping the purple moor - ") and repetitious phrases to emphasise action ("A red-coat troop came marching - marching - marching -"). Almost half a century later, Noyes wrote, "I think the success of the poem... was because it was not an artificial composition, but was written at an age when I was genuinely excited by that kind of romantic story."
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and pinewoods. 'The
Highwayman' suggested itself to me one blustery night when the sound of the wind in the pines gave me the first line." The poem was completed in about two days.
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who is in love with Bess, a landlord's daughter. Betrayed to the authorities by Tim, a jealous
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In 1933, a setting of the poem for chorus and small orchestra by the
English composer
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mentioned it briefly after a sick, 14-year-old girl tells poems to the protagonist,
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Alfred Noyes 'Two Worlds for Memory. Philadelphia: J. B. Clipping, 1953, p. 38.
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The poem, set in 18th-century rural
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The poem was written on the edge of a desolate stretch of land known as
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In 1951, the poem was used as the basis for a feature-length
Hollywood
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used the poem as the background for her historical novels,
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468:Works originally published in Blackwood's Magazine
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156:"The Highwayman" uses hexameter that mixes
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406:. 12 August 1951 – via IMDb.
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297:Everywhere
224:John Otway
124:Background
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63:media help
247:from the
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360:2015
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