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The Highwayman" is a romantic ballad and narrative poem written by Alfred Noyes, first published in the August 1906 issue [1] of Blackwood's Magazine, based in Edinburgh, Scotland. The following year it was included in Noyes' collection, Forty Singing Seamen and Other Poems , becoming an immediate success.
Highwayman (song) The Highwayman (poem) R. Renegade Nell; Rookwood (novel) S. Stand and Deliver (Adam and the Ants song) T. The Newry Highwayman; W. Whiskey in the ...
Edward Lear's poem "The Pelican Chorus" was adapted into the song "Pelicans We" by Cosmo Sheldrake. Johnny Cash's "Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes," from Ben Jonson's poem "Song: To Celia." Anna Dennis and Voice of Music's "Gather Ye Rosebuds While Ye May," from Robert Herrick's poem "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time."
The Highwayman is a 1951 American historical adventure film directed by Lesley Selander and starring Philip Friend, Wanda Hendrix and Cecil Kellaway. The film was shot in Cinecolor and distributed by Allied Artists, the prestige subsidiary of Monogram Pictures. It was based on the poem of the same name by Alfred Noyes.
"The Highwayman" (poem), a 1906 poem by Alfred Noyes "The Highwayman", a short story by Lord Dunsany later made into a short film; The Highwayman, a 1962 novel by Sylvia Thorpe; The Highwayman, a 1955 novel by Noel Gerson; The Highwayman, a 1955 novel by Frank Gruber (writer) The Highwayman, a 1996 novel by Madeline Harper; The Highwayman, a ...
Dick Turpin's Ride (reissued as The Lady and the Bandit) is a 1951 American adventure film directed by Ralph Murphy and starring Louis Hayward. [1] It follows the career of the eighteenth century highwayman Dick Turpin.
Highwayman" is a song written by American singer-songwriter Jimmy Webb about a soul with incarnations in four different places in time and history: as a highwayman, a sailor, a construction worker on the Hoover Dam, and finally as a captain of a starship. Webb first recorded the song on his album El Mirage, released in May 1977.