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    Elizabeth Bishop

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    Introduction Elizabeth Bishop‚ born in 1911‚ was a rather marginalized and obscure figure in the American literature even though she won the Pulitzer Award with her fellow poets Robert Lowell and Marianne Moore. She attained literally prominence just a few years before her death. Since then her prominent and critical reputation has changed and grown to a point of being considered as one of the best American poets in the twentieth century. Bishop was always controlled and reticent in her verses unlike

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    Elizabeth Bishop

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    The poem “One Art” by Elizabeth Bishop is in the form of a villanelle poem‚ which means that it’s a nineteen-line poem that has two repeating rhymes and two refrains. The first and third line of the opening tercet‚ which is a set of three lines of the verse rhyming‚ are repeated in the last lines of the stanzas. Elizabeth Bishop approaches loss is an indirect way‚ meaning the poem does not directly explain what it means to lose something. She gives examples of losing things‚ like keys and her mother’s

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    Elizabeth Bishop

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    Background Elizabeth Bishop was a keen fisherwoman. This poem was written when she lived in Florida‚ and it tells of a real experience she had when fishing off Key West. Summary and analysis The poem is narrated in the first person‚ which gives a sense of intimacy and draws the reader into the tale. The poet tells us of a fishing trip in a rented boat. She succeeds in catching ’a tremendous fish’ and pulls him half out of the water with her fish hook lodged firmly in the corner of his

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    ‘The Fish’ by Elizabeth Bishop is a free form poem where the poet does a spectacular job in describing what has occurred from the moment she catches a fish‚ to the time she releases it‚ after a chain of rather interesting events. At the beginning of the poemBishop creates an image of a helpless fish‚ which is held captive by the narrator in the poem. In doing so‚ she is able to guide the audience into feeling sorry for the fish and the situation described in the poem in general. She commences

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    Elizabeth Bishop

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    Elizabeth Bishop There are many fantastic poets out there today and there were many in the past. One of these many great poets is Elizabeth Bishop. She started writing poems in 1946 and stopped in 1979. Her poems were very imaginative yet serious and sophisticated at the same time. Each poet has their own way to write‚ and this is hers. Elizabeth Bishop was born on February 8‚ 1911 in Worcester‚ Massachusetts. Only a few months after Bishop was born‚ her father passed away and because of this

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    Elizabeth Bishop Study

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    Elizabeth Bishop Bishop’s poetry changes everyday scenes to vivid imagery. Bishop has a keen eye for detail as she converts the visual images that she sees into words of poetic language that creates vivid images in the reader’s mind. The poet’s powers of observation and description is evident in the poemFilling Station”. The poem starts with a striking clear image of her entire surroundings: “Oh‚ but it is dirty!”. The image of an ‘overall black translucency’ conveys the picture of the overwhelming

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    Poetry – Elizabeth Bishop

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    Poetry – Elizabeth Bishop Aoife O’Driscoll www.aoifesnotes.com Elizabeth Bishop – Brief Biography Elizabeth Bishop was born in Massachusetts in 1911. Her father died when she was a baby‚ and his death caused Bishop’s mother to have a mental breakdown. When Bishop was five her mother was permanently institutionalised and was never reunited with her daughter. Bishop’s maternal grandparents took care of her and she spent her early childhood with them on their farm in Nova Scotia. Bishop was very

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    learned that Bishop excels at taking the mundane and transforming it to something beautiful. Her poems are so beautifully written that one does not merely read her poetry‚ instead one can see her subject matter right in front of them. It would be easy to dismiss Bishop’s poetry as merely a descriptive look at the routine but Bishop’s poetry all holds a deeper meaning that really only becomes apparent when you look at Bishop’s own life. After losing her father at an early age and her mother’s institutionalization

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    The poem ’The Fish’ by Elizabeth Bishop is a narrative poem told in first person about the capture of a fish by an amateur fisher and the progression of the understanding for the beauty of nature. As the poem progresses the speaker moves from a sympathetic pitiful view to a respected and admiring view of the fish. The internal confrontation of the speaker is aided with vivid imagery and similes. The speaker convinces the reader alternatively of both the fish’s beauty and its repulsiveness. She describes

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    Elizabeth Bishop Analysis

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    Elizabeth Bishop is an intriguing and enigmatic poet whose poetic voice is distinct and individualistic. In many ways Derek Mahon ’s assessment of Bishop as "the shy perfectionist with her painter ’s eye"‚ is her most fitting and apt legacy. Bishop ’s work is replete with vivid imagery and striking metaphors and the keenness of her perception of the world around her is remarkable. Her poetry is carefully wrought often combining rich and detailed imagery with thematic indirectness. In my opinion‚

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