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  1. Elizabeth Jennings (born July 18, 1926, Boston, Lincolnshire, England—died October 26, 2001, Bampton, Oxfordshire) was an English poet whose works relate intensely personal matters in a plainspoken, traditional, and objective style. Her verse frequently reflects her devout Roman Catholicism and her love of Italy.

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  2. Elizabeth Joan Jennings CBE (18 July 1926 – 26 October 2001) [1] was an English poet. Life and career. Elizabeth Jennings was born at The Bungalow, Tower Road, Skirbeck, Boston, Lincolnshire, younger daughter of physician Henry Cecil Jennings (1893–1967), MA, BSc ( Oxon. ), MB BS ( Lond.

  3. Elizabeth Jennings is known today as a master of form and lyric poetry. Her work is marked by its emotional restraint and connection to the Roman Catholic church. She is often compared to and contrasted with Philip Larkin, Kingsley Amis, and Thom Gunn, all members of the English poetic group known as The Movement.

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  5. Elizabeth Jennings: A Civil Rights Icon of Faith and Courage - Guideposts. Brett Leveridge. 5 min read. Elizabeth Jennings, a church-going school teacher, stood up for her right to use New York’s public transportation more than a century before Rosa Parks’ courageous stand. Unlock a world of inspiration right in your inbox!

  6. Elizabeth Jennings was an English poet who won the Arts Council of Great Britain Prize for the best first book of poems for Poems in 1953. She was incredibly prolific and returned time and time again to themes of love, death, and religion. She is remembered today as a “traditionalist” known for her use of structure, meter, and rhyme.

  7. Apr 2, 2019 · By Washington University Libraries April 02, 2019. Poet Elizabeth Jennings (1926–2001) led an extraordinary life: the only woman to join the Movement (an English group of poets dedicated to an anti-romantic aesthetic); publisher of twenty-six books of poetry in her lifetime; colloquially known in her later life as the bag-lady of poetry due ...

  8. The Presidency. Historical Moments. ‘I did not get off the car’. In 1854, a Black woman championed the end to segregated public transportation in New York City. A future president helped her. Photo: Elizabeth Jennings Graham; Wikimedia Commons. Elizabeth Jennings's first-person story appeared in the New York Daily Tribune on July 19, 1854.

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