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John Betjeman, ill. van o.a. de Cronin Hastings, Osbert Lancaster and Gabriel Pippet, - Continual dew, a little book of bourgeois verse, facsimile reissue

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Afbeelding: John Betjeman, ill. van o.a. de Cronin Hastings, Osbert Lancaster and Gabriel Pippet, - Continual dew, a little book of bourgeois verse, facsimile reissue
Schrijver: John Betjeman, ill. van o.a. de Cronin Hastings, Osbert Lancaster and Gabriel Pippet,
Titel: Continual dew, a little book of bourgeois verse, facsimile reissue
ISBN: 9780719533952
Uitgever: John Murray, London, (1937), 1977, 45 blz., zwart linnen hardcover, geen stofomslag
Bijzonderheid: 15 x 21,5 cm., 225 gr., uitstekende conditie, onbeschreven
Prijs: € 7,00
€ 3,80
Meer info Sir John Betjeman,28 August 1906 - 19 May 1984) was an English poet, writer and broadcaster who described himself in Who's Who as a "poet and hack". He was a founding member of the Victorian Society and a passionate defender of Victorian architecture. Starting his career as a journalist, he ended it as one of the most popular British Poets Laureate to date and a much-loved figure on British television. Betjeman was born "John Betjemann"; this was changed to the less German "Betjeman" during the First World War. He grew up at Parliament Hill Mansions in the Lissenden Gardens private estate in Highgate in North London. His parents Mabel (née Dawson) and Ernest Betjemann had a family firm which manufactured the kind of ornamental household furniture and gadgets distinctive to Victorians. His father's forebears had come from the Netherlands, more than a century earlier, setting up their home and business in Islington, London. Betjeman was baptised at St. Anne's Church Highgate Rise, a 19th Century church situated just at the foot of Highgate West Hill. In 1909, the Betjemanns left the Parliament Hill Mansions, moving half a mile north to more opulent Highgate. From West Hill they lived in the reflected glory of the Burdett-Coutts estate "Here from my eyrie, as the sun went down, I heard the old North London puff and shunt, Glad that I did not live in Gospel Oak." Betjeman's early schooling was at the local Byron House and Highgate School, where he was taught by the poet T. S. Eliot. After this, he boarded at the Dragon School preparatory school in North Oxford and Marlborough College, a public school in Wiltshire. In his penultimate year, he joined the secret 'Society of Amici' in which he was a contemporary of both Louis MacNeice and Graham Shepard. Reading the works of Arthur Machen while at school, won him over to High Church Anglicanism, a conversion of importance and to his later writing and conception of the arts.
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