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LRB Article PDF: All Together Now (<i>LRB</i> volume 19 number 24, 11 December 1997) 

LRB Article PDF: All Together Now (LRB volume 19 number 24, 11 December 1997)

Richard Jenkyns

What is the best known Victorian poem? Which American poems of the same period are best known in this country? Which verses by a canonical English poet do the largest number of people today know by heart? The best known Victorian poem is probably 'Good King Wenceslas' (by J.M. Neale), followed by 'Once in royal David's city' (Mrs Alexander); 'All things bright and beautiful' (also Mrs Alexander) is less familiar than it used to be, but was once possibly the best known of all. The most famous American poem of the Victorian age is 'Away in a manger' (anonymous), with 'O little town of Bethlehem' (Phillips Brooks) and 'Dear Lord and Father of mankind' (John Greenleaf Whittier) as runners-up. Among the works of the canonical English poets, the lines known to most people are probably those beginning Blake's Milton, 'And did those feet in ancient time ...', which Parry set to music and turned into the hymn 'Jerusalem'.

LRB 11 December 1997 | PDF Download

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