Craven Langstroth Betts (April 23, 1853–1941) was a Canadian poet and author.
Betts was educated in Canada and in 1879 moved to New York to engage in business and to study literature.
[2] Betts was a friend and patron of the American poet Edwin Arlington Robinson[3] and served as his "banker", cashing cheques that came from the dwindling Robinson estate at Maine, as well as lending him small sums of money.
The two men were frequent drinking and dining companions,[4] and in the summers of 1900 and 1901, lived together at Betts's house in Manhattan whilst his mother and aunt were away in cooler climes.
[6] While he published in other formats — he co-authored a collection of "social satire"[7] in prose with Arthur Wentworth Hamilton Eaton and wrote the lyrics for at least one madrigal[8] — the majority of Betts's literary output was poetry.