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"The Highwayman" uses hexameter that mixes iambs and anapaests. The rhythm is suggestive of the foot falls of a galloping horse. Noyes frequently uses alliteration, such as the phrase "ghostly galleon", and also uses refrains in each stanza. The genre of this poem seems to be a romance, but like Romeo and Juliet, the poem is a tragedy in the ...
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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.
An anonymous review of The Edge of the Abyss in the American magazine Free World was more critical. The review focuses on Noyes' claim that literary Modernism is a symptom of the problems of the world, and concluded: "The point is debatable, the argument high-pitched and inconclusive, and the remedies proposed vague and unsatisfactory."
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.
On these records, Ochs was accompanied only by an acoustic guitar. The albums contain many of Ochs's topical songs, such as "Too Many Martyrs", "I Ain't Marching Anymore", and "Draft Dodger Rag"; and some musical reinterpretation of older poetry, such as "The Highwayman" (poem by Alfred Noyes) and "The Bells" (poem by Edgar Allan Poe).
Willem Dafoe, Catherine O’Hara, Sabrina Ionescu, Randy Moss and Ryan Crouser face off on the courts in Michelob Ultra's Super Bowl spot
"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 ...