| The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07. |
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| Benét, Stephen Vincent |
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(b n ´) (KEY) , 18981943, American poet and author, b. Bethlehem, Pa., grad. Yale, 1919; brother of William Rose Benét. After graduating from college, Benét published several volumes of verse, including A Ballad of William Sycamore (1923), and several novels, of which Jean Huguenot (1923) and The Spanish Bayonet (1926) are the best. He is most famous for John Browns Body (1928), a long narrative poem of the Civil War (Pulitzer Prize, 1929), and his short story, The Devil and Daniel Webster. Western Star, a long narrative poem about the westward migration left unfinished at his death, was published in 1943 (Pulitzer Prize, 1944). | 1 | | See his selected works (2 vol., 1942); letters, ed. by C. A. Fenton (1960); studies by C. A. Fenton (1978) and W. R. Benét (1979). | 2 |
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| | | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2007 Columbia University Press. |
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