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         Bishop Elizabeth:     more books (100)
  1. Elizabeth Bishop: Her Poetics of Loss by Susan McCabe, 1994-11
  2. A Gallery of Amish Quilts: Design Diversity from a Plain People by Robert Bishop, Elizabeth Safanda, 1976-10-27
  3. Elizabeth Bishop: Poet of the Periphery (New Castle/Bloodaxe Poetry Series, 1) by Linda Anderson, 2002-08-26
  4. Elizabeth Bishop and Marianne Moore by Joanne Feit Diehl, 1993-04-05
  5. Dazzling Dialectics:Elizabeth Bishop's Resonating Feminist Reality by Sally Bishop Shigley, 1997-11
  6. Elizabeth Bishop: The Restraints of Language by C. K. Doreski, 1993-05-27
  7. Divisions of the heart: Elizabeth Bishop and the art of memory and place
  8. The Veiled Mirror and the Woman Poet: H.D., Louise Bogan, Elizabeth Bishop, and Louise Gluck by Elizabeth Dodd, 1992-11
  9. Elizabeth Bishop: Comprehensive Research and Study Guide (Bloom's Major Poets)
  10. Marianne Moore, Elizabeth Bishop, and May Swenson: The Feminist Poetics of Self-Restraint by Kirstin Riter Hotelling Zona, 2002-12-10
  11. Inscrutable Houses: Metaphors of the Body in the Poems of Elizabeth Bishop by Anne Colwell, 1997-06-30
  12. Elizabeth Bishop and Her Art (Under Discussion)
  13. The Diary of "Helena Morley" by Elizabeth Bishop, 1995-05-31
  14. Five Temperaments: Elizabeth Bishop, Robert Lowell, James Merrill, Adrienne Rich, John Ashbery by David Kalstone, 1977-10-06

41. Elizabeth Bishop Quotes
elizabeth bishop was an American writer, who is often considered one of the greatest poets of the 20th century. Influenced by Marianne Moore,
http://classiclit.about.com/od/bishopelizabeth/a/aa_ebishopquote.htm
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Classic Literature
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    Elizabeth Bishop Quotes
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    Discover lines from Elizabeth Bishop, American writer.
    By Esther Lombardi , About.com
    See More About:
    Elizabeth Bishop was an American writer, who is often considered one of the greatest poets of the 20th century. Influenced by Marianne Moore, her poetry collections include: "North & South" (1946), "North & SouthA Cold Spring" (1955), and "Questions of Travel" (1965). Here are a few quotes from Elizabeth Bishop.
    • "All my life I have lived and behaved very much like the sandpiper - just running down the edges of different countries and continents, 'looking for something'."

    42. Elizabeth Bishop On LibraryThing | Catalog Your Books Online
    4 copies, 0 review; The Voice of the Poet elizabeth bishop 3 copies, 0 review There are 16 conversations about elizabeth bishop s books.
    http://www.librarything.com/author/bishopelizabeth
    Language: English [ others http://www.davidlavery.net/barfield/ (Owen Barfield) 1 picture add a picture
    Author: Elizabeth Bishop
    Also known as: Bishop Elizabeth Members Reviews Rating Favorited Conversations
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    combine/separate works
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    Average: 0.5 stars 1 stars 1.5 stars 2 stars 2.5 stars 3 stars 3.5 stars 4 stars 4.5 stars

    43. Elizabeth Bishop's Christian Sin - TLS Highlights - Times Online
    In the AugustSeptember 1938 issue of the Partisan Review, alongside Trotsky’s “Art and Politics” and Victor Serge’s “Marxism in our Time”, elizabeth bishop
    http://tls.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,25338-2634607,00.html
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    Times Online April 11, 2007
    Elizabeth Bishop's Christian sin
    James Fenton
    NI_MPU('middle'); He sleeps on the top of a mast
    with his eyes fast closed.
    The sails fall away below him
    like the sheets of his bed,
    leaving out in the air of the night the
    In the Second Part, the pilgrims come to an Arbour in the Enchanted Ground, where they find Heedless and Too Bold, also asleep. The guide tries to wake them, and they speak as if from a dream. Christian asks the meaning of this: 31 Looke not thou upon the wine, when it is red, and when it sheweth his colour in the cuppe, or goeth down pleasantly. 32 In the ende thereof it will bite like a serpent, and hurt like a cockatrise. 33 Thine eyes shall looke upon strange women, and thine heart shall speake lewde things. 34 And thou shalt bee as one that sleepeth in the middes of the sea, and as he that sleepeth in the top of the mast. 35 They have stricken me, shalt thou say, but I was not sicke: they have beaten me, but I knew not, when I awoke: therefore will I seeke it yet still. (Connoisseurs of Chaos: Ideas of order in modern American poetry, 1964.)

    44. Project MUSE
    elizabeth bishop s name was spoken, her books reviewed with deep respect. But attention was paid to her triumphs, her perfections, not to her struggles for
    http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/elh/v062/62.2longenbach.html
    How Do I Get This Article? Athens Login
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    Login: Password: Longenbach, James
    Elizabeth Bishop's Social Conscience
    ELH - Volume 62, Number 2, Summer 1995, pp. 467-486
    The Johns Hopkins University Press
    Search Journals About MUSE

    45. Sample Poems
    “One Art” by elizabeth bishop emphasizes that getting through life Electrical Storm by elizabeth bishop shows the reaction of a cat while in a big
    http://project1.caryacademy.org/echoes/poet_Elizabeth_Bishop/Samplepoemsbishop.h
    echoes main Biography Bishop Sample Poetry Inspired Poems ... Bibliography Sample Poetry One Art by Elizabeth Bishop The art of losing isn't hard to master;
    so many things seem filled with the intent
    to be lost that their loss is no disaster.
    Lose something every day. Accept the fluster
    of lost door keys the hour badly spent.
    The art of losing isn't hard to master.
    Then practice losing farther losing faster:
    places and names and where it was your meant
    to travel. None of these will bring disaster.
    I lost my mother's watch. And look! my last or
    next-to-last of three loved housed went. The art of losing isn't hard to master. I lose two cities lovely ones. And vaster some realms I owned two rivers a continent. I miss them but it wasn't a disaster. Even losing you (the joking voice a gesture I love) I shan't have lied. It's evident the art of losing is not too hard to master though it may look like disaster. Analysis by Amanda Dombrowski One Art” by Elizabeth Bishop emphasizes that getting through life requires you to experience the lose of s omething. Losing things is something that happens everyday and this is what the poet is expressing. Not everyone is completely organized, and she lets us know by using examples of what people loose daily. “It’s evident/ the art of loosing is not too hard to master/ though it may look like a disaster.” In this quote Bishop represents that losing is a form of art and everyone masters it sometime in his or her life even if it looks hard to do. Bishop is saying that you can lose something

    46. PRIMARY STAGES - Celebrating Playwrights And New Plays
    This is a rare chance to experience elizabeth bishop and Amy Irving, melded. She produced and acted in A SAFE HARBOR FOR elizabeth bishop for New York
    http://www.primarystages.com/safeharbor.htm
    21st Season AMY IRVING "gives A DYNAMITE PERFORMANCE! If Elizabeth Bishop wasn't just like Amy Irving, she should have been." The Wall Street Journal "gives A STAGGERING PERFORMANCE! This is a rare chance to experience Elizabeth Bishop and Amy Irving, melded." Liz Smith "UNDER THE CRISP DIRECTION OF RICHARD JAY-ALEXANDER, manages to make Bishop's intelligence and restraint believable. Her intense focus can sometimes make us see the invisible people she's addressing." -John Lahr, The New Yorker "IS LUMINOUS!" Time Out NY How did a profound passion for art and beauty create a Pulitzer Prize winning writer? OBIE winning and Academy Award nominated actress Amy Irving explores the creative evolution of the legendary poetess Elizabeth Bishop. Ms. Góes’ commanding script transports us from the harbors of Rio, Seattle, New York, and Boston, while detailing a sweeping landscape of the truths behind commitment. Overflowing with love, loss, politics, and sexual intrigue, A Safe Harbor for Elizabeth Bishop invites us on a journey of redemption and self-acceptance through the power of poetry.

    47. Asian-American Poetry: On Elizabeth Bishop's "Filling Station"
    Whenever I want to experience the life force that poetry can provide, I often turn to the poems of elizabeth bishop. While a poem like bishop s The Moose
    http://asianamericanpoetry.blogspot.com/2007/04/on-elizabeth-bishops-filling-sta
    @import url("http://www.blogger.com/css/blog_controls.css"); @import url("http://www.blogger.com/dyn-css/authorization.css?targetBlogID=9834316");
    Asian-American Poetry
    My Wonderful and Exciting Takes on the Ever-Changing World of Asian-American Poetry
    Monday, April 30, 2007
    On Elizabeth Bishop's "Filling Station"
    Whenever I want to experience the life force that poetry can provide, I often turn to the poems of Elizabeth Bishop. While a poem like Bishop's "The Moose" may be grander in scope, and a poem like Bishop's "One Art" may be more technically ambitious, I find a poem like Bishop's "Filling Station" more emotionally rich and satisfying. In a way, it is kind of like the As Good As It Gets of Bishop's poetry.
    In "Filling Station," Bishop details the everyday particularities of "a family filling station" with Norman Rockwellian precision in six stanzas with six or seven lines each and an ending couplet. Aside from the second stanza, which alludes to a father and his "several quick and saucy/ and greasy sons," the poem is focused on setting and, more specifically, the objects in that setting, including "a cement porch/ behind the pumps," "a big dim doily/ draping a taboret," and, of course, as only Bishop would phrase it, "a big hirsute begonia."
    I like the "Filling Station," in particular, because it embodies many different, overlapping yet conflicting, ideas and emotions. It demonstrates the richness of humanity, optimistically suggesting that people can enact their love through quotidian rituals and, as the final line goes, that "Somebody loves us all."

    48. Here In The Bonny Glen: Poetry Friday: Elizabeth Bishop
    There midnight s all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow, and evening full of the linnet s wings. —WB Yeats.
    http://melissawiley.typepad.com/bonnyglen/2008/01/poetry-friday-e.html
    Here in the Bonny Glen
    "There midnight's all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow, and evening full of the linnet's wings."—W. B. Yeats
    Home About My Books Best of Bonny Glen Tidal Learning ... Archives
    Welcome to the Bonny Glen
    Our Family Rule of Six
    • Six Things to Include in Your Child's Day: • meaningful work • imaginative play • good books • beauty (art, music, nature) • ideas to ponder and discuss • prayer A Lilting House post explaining the Rule of Six: Whence It Came
    My Bonny Clan
    • Jane, 12 yrs old Rose, 9 yrs Beanie, 7 yrs Wonderboy, 4 yrs baby Rilla, 21 months and Scott , the love of my life
    Books by Melissa Wiley

    49. Elizabeth Bishop | "The Fish" | Poetry Archive | Plagiarist.com
    elizabeth bishop. Please visit our sponsor. I caught a tremendous fish and held him beside the boat half out of water, with my hook fast in a corner of his
    http://plagiarist.com/poetry/63/
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    50. Elizabeth Bishop  (July-August 2005)
    strongBy the time strongElizabeth bishop settled into her apartment on the Boston waterfront, in recently refurbished Lewis Wharf, it was 1974.
    http://harvardmagazine.com/2005/07/elizabeth-bishop.html
    Harvard Magazine July-August 2005
    Sign up to receive Harvard Magazine e-mail updates!
    Vita: Elizabeth Bishop
    Brief life of the poet as displaced person: 1911-1979
    by Cheryl Lawson Walker
    By the time North and South , the title of her first book, maps the great rift between her intellectual and emotional roots in the Northeast and the blossoming of her talent and sexuality in the tropics. Having lost her father before she was a year old and watched her mother descend into madness, the five-year-old Bishop clung to her maternal grandparents in Nova Scotia. But she was soon uprooted by her paternal grandparents in Worcester and forced to return to the United States. Thus began a life of displacement during which she moved from one temporary situation to another in Worcester, Revere, and Walnut Hill, Massachusetts (where she attended private school), to Vassar College, and then New York City, Europe, and, for a lengthier time, Key West. Her deep-rooted sense of belonging nowhere seems to have contributed to the serious allergies and alcoholism that plagued her all her life. Against the vertigo of continual upheavals, Bishop deployed the literary talents that would eventually make her one of the most highly respected American poets of the twentieth century. In the segment on Bishop in the 1988 PBS series

    51. Elizabeth Bishop — Blogs, Pictures, And More On WordPress
    As a poet, elizabeth bishop was an amazing letter writer. Some of bishop’s meticulously edited and reedited poems arise from over 100 drafts.
    http://wordpress.com/tag/elizabeth-bishop/
    WordPress.com
    Preferred Language: English Espa±ol Deutsch Portuguªs do Brasil Fran§ais Italiano Bahasa Indonesia Nederlands Svenska Portuguªs T¼rk§e More Languages
    Blogs about Elizabeth Bishop
    Featured Blog
    Belles Bloggres
    Joe Felso: Ruminations
    "Januaries, Nature greets our eyes" 2 comments
    Januaries wrote 3 weeks ago Tags: Bishop Blogging Poetry
    summary of the night on the hips of the last day of classes ...
    phoenix julia wrote 1 month ago Tags: just like this
    Preoccupation
    pdom wrote 2 months ago Tags: Poetry
    We Have a Little Poetry With Our Food
    Denise wrote 3 months ago Tags: Anne Marie Macari BJ Ward Cor Van Den Heuval Emily Dickinson ... Steven Ford Brown
    John Bayley’s ‘Good Companions’ – An Ideal Collection of Poetry (and More) for People Who Didn’t Major in English 2 comments
    wrote 3 months ago : A former Oxford professor offers a lively introduction famous and little-known poems Good Companions: A Personal Anthology. By John Bayley. Tags: Paperbacks Poetry
    Belles Bloggres 4 comments
    joefelso wrote 4 months ago Tags: Aesthetics American Life Art Blogging ... Literature
    In Memoriam: Liam Rector 6 comments
    joefelso wrote 5 months ago Tags: Life Thoughts writing Teaching ... Januaries wrote 7 months ago : This is my letter to the World That never wrote to Me - The simple News that Nature told - Tags: Bishop Blogging Dickinson Poetry
    Cirque d'Hiver
    ecnebiedebiyat wrote 7 months ago
    elizabeth bishop - ii ...

    52. Rzepka, 'Elizabeth Bishop And The Wordsworth Of _Lyrical Ballads_: Sentimentalis
    elizabeth bishop and the Wordsworth of _Lyrical Ballads_ Sentimentalism, Straw Men, and Misprision by Charles Rzepka. Rzepka explores the connections
    http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/lyrical/rzepka/bishop.html
    The "Honourable Characteristic of Poetry":
    Two Hundred Years of Lyrical Ballads
    Elizabeth Bishop and the Wordsworth of Lyrical Ballads
    Sentimentalism, Straw Men, and Misprision
    Charles Rzepka, Boston University
    Elizabeth Bishop's affinities with William Wordsworth were remarked long before her death in 1979. Bishop herself confessed them in a letter to Robert Lowell in July, 1951: "On reading over what I've got on hand"she was referring to the poems that were to appear in 1955, in A Cold Spring "I find I'm really a minor female Wordsworthat least, I don't know anyone else who seems to be such a Nature Lover" ( One Art . Robert Pinsky, Willard Spiegelman, Helen Vendler, and David Bromwich were among the first to conduct forays into Bishop's admittedly Wordsworthian sensibility, and Vendler was the first to link Bishop specifically with "the Wordsworth of Lyrical Ballads"
    Given the large-scale homology between the poets' lives, we would expect to find a corresponding homology in their poetry. Jonathan Barron summarizes the biographical resemblances: the early disappearance of both parents; the rural Eden of childhood that was lost with the child's removal to the spiritual suffocation of unsympathetic, middle-class guardians; the regaining of paradise, if on reduced terms, later in life. Bishop's "Hawkshead was Nova Scotia," writes Barron, "and her Grasmere was Brazil" (299).
    In the past decade and a half, critical views of Wordsworth's influence on Bishop have taken on a more revisionist tone: Wordsworth's "Romantic" (here, a term of opprobrium) version of the natural world and of naturalized human figures has come to be seen by some as an obstacle that Bishop not only had to overcome, but overthrow. What is targeted for overthrow is, in nearly every case, the Wordsworth of the notorious "egotistical sublime"domineering, intransigent, optimistic, monologistic, masculinist, self-congratulatoryin short, a sentimentalized Victorian parody of himself. Jeredith Merrin, in her landmark chapter on the two poets in

    53. Bookninja » Blog Archive » Elizabeth Bishop
    In the coming years everyone in Atlantic Canada will be on the idea of elizabeth bishop being one of us. Here Nova Scotia kicks things off with a
    http://www.bookninja.com/?p=2942

    54. Elizabeth Bishop Collection, 1965-1979: Finding Aid
    American poet elizabeth bishop was born on February 8, 1911, in Worcester, Mass. She graduated from Vassar in 1934. bishop traveled widely and lived for
    http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/d217qp505
    @import url("/ead/css/ead.css"); @import url("/ead/css/eadPrint.css");
    Contact Top of Finding Aid Summary Information Biography of Elizabeth Bishop ... Help Print: HTML PDF
    Elizabeth Bishop Collection, 1965-1979: Finding Aid
    Manuscripts Division One Washington Road Princeton, New Jersey 08544 USA Phone: (609) 258-3184 Fax: (609) 258-2324 rbsc@princeton.edu http://www.princeton.edu/~rbsc Published on January 12, 2006 ©2006 Princeton University Library
    Summary Information
    Creator:
    Bishop, Elizabeth, 1911-1979.
    Title and dates:
    Elizabeth Bishop Collection, 1965-1979
    Abstract:
    Consists primarily of Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Elizabeth Bishop's correspondence with her friend Ashley Brown.
    Size:
    .20 linear feet (1 half-size archival box)
    Call number:
    Location:
    Princeton University Library. Dept. of Rare Books and Special Collections.
    Manuscripts Division.
    Princeton, New Jersey 08544 USA
    Language(s) of material:
    English
    Biography of Elizabeth Bishop
    American poet Elizabeth Bishop was born on February 8, 1911, in Worcester, Mass. She graduated from Vassar in 1934. Bishop traveled widely and lived for many years in Brazil. Among her many awards were the Pulitzer Prize for A Cold Spring (1955) and the National Book Award for Geography III
    Description
    The collection consists of 31 typed letters (1965-1979), 13 note cards, 3 telegrams, and a newspaper clipping with a typed message by Bishop to her friend Ashley Brown, as well as a typescript (17 pp.) of an interview by Brown, with holograph corrections by Bishop. Much of this correspondence dates from Bishop's years in Brasil.

    55. Elizabeth Bishop - Research And Read Books, Journals, Articles At
    Research elizabeth bishop at the Questia.com online library.
    http://www.questia.com/library/literature/elizabeth-bishop.jsp

    56. Salon.com Audio | "The Voice Of The Poet"
    Although she wrote less than many of her peers, the evident mastery of her poems secured for elizabeth bishop a leading position in American letters.
    http://archive.salon.com/audio/poetry/2001/11/27/bishop/index.html

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  • "The Voice of the Poet" Elizabeth Bishop This installment in the "Voice of the Poet" series a series comprising rare archival recordings, some never before released features the acclaimed Elizabeth Bishop. Print story E-mail story Although she wrote less than many of her peers, the evident mastery of her poems secured for Elizabeth Bishop a leading position in American letters. Praised from the start for their descriptive surfaces their clarity, wittily observed details and tonal control Bishop's poems reveal dark, abiding mysteries. Bishop mostly refused to allow recordings of her work. Still, the archives have yielded a rare and generous series of readings, released here for the first time. These recordings will enthrall her many fans and illuminate her poetry.

    57. 7277. Bishop, Elizabeth. The Columbia World Of Quotations. 1996
    7277. bishop, elizabeth. The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996.
    http://www.bartleby.com/66/77/7277.html
    Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Quotations The Columbia World of Quotations PREVIOUS ... AUTHOR INDEX The Columbia World of Quotations. NUMBER: QUOTATION: It is what we imagine knowledge to be:
    dark, salt, clear, moving, utterly free

    58. LRB · Gillian White: Awful But Cheerful
    Edgar Allan Poe the JukeBox Uncollected Poems, Drafts and Fragments by elizabeth bishop, edited by Alice Quinn Buy this book
    http://www.lrb.co.uk/v28/n10/whit05_.html
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    Awful but Cheerful
    Gillian White
    In 1940, after she’d gained the admiration of Marianne Moore and William Carlos Williams, and had had nearly thirty of her poems published in literary journals or book collections, Elizabeth Bishop, then 28, admitted in a letter to Moore: ‘I scarcely know why I persist at all. It is really fantastic to place so much on the fact that I have written a half-dozen phrases that I can still bear to reread without too much embarrassment.’ Bishop persisted with such dramatic self-doubt even after winning the Houghton Mifflin poetry award for her first collection, (1946), and a Pulitzer Prize in 1956 for her second

    59. Cornell Athletics
    ITHACA , N.Y. Big Red volleyball s elizabeth bishop ( Portland , Ore. ) was named to the Northeast AllRegion Team at the completion of her senior season
    http://cornellbigred.com/news/wvball/2006/12/7/120706aaa.asp?path=wvball

    60. Elizabeth Bishop, 1911-1979. American Author
    University Libraries Washington University in St. Louis.
    http://library.wustl.edu/units/spec/manuscripts/mlc/bishop/
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    Elizabeth Bishop, 1911-1979. American Author
    Bishop Papers, [#12] Bishop Papers, [#146]
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