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Elizabeth Bishop [1911-1979] USA
Ranked #68 in the top 380 poets
Votes 84%: 1280 up, 237 down

Highly detailed and objective, distant point of view, its reticence on the kinds of personal subject matter.

Where some of her notable contemporaries like Robert Lowell and John Berryman made the intimate details of their personal lives an important part of their poetry, Bishop avoided this practice altogether. In contrast to this confessional style involving large amounts of self-exposure, Bishop's style of writing, though it sometimes involved sparse details from her personal life, was known for its highly detailed and objective, distant point of view and for its reticence on the kinds of personal subject matter that the work of her contemporaries involved. And she used discretion when writing about details and people from her own life.

Her verse is marked by precise descriptions of the physical world and an air of poetic serenity, but her underlying themes include the struggle to find a sense of belonging, and the human experiences of grief and longing. 

Considered herself to be "a strong feminist" but she only wanted to be judged based on the quality of her writing and not on her gender or sexual orientation.

Elizabeth Bishop  was American born but raised in Canada. Started writing at Vassar on the student paper and founding her own magazine `Con Spirito`. Bishop one most of the major poetry prizes including a Pulitzer and was a good linguist translating from  the Brazilian.Elizabeth Bishop was born in Worcester, Massachusetts in 1911, but spent part of her childhood with her Canadian grandparents after her father`s death and mother`s hospitalization. Of her childhood she noted, "My relatives all felt so sorry for this child that they tried to do their very best. And I think they did. I lived with my grandparents in Nova Scotia, then with the ones in Worcester, in Massachusetts, very briefly and got terribly sick. This was when I was six and seven.... Then I lived with my mother`s older sister in Boston, she was devoted to me -- she had no children. 

Miss Bishop attended Vassar where she majored in English although she had originally intended to major in music composition and piano. "You had to perform in public once a month. Well, this terrified me. I really was sick. I played once and then gave up the piano because I couldn`t bear it. The next year I switched to English." 

In addition to working on the school newspaper, The Vassar Miscellany, Bishop founded a literary magazine, Con Spirito, with fellow students Mary McCarthy, Eleanor Clark, and Muriel Rukeyser. It was as a Vassar student that Elizabeth Bishop met Marianne Moore. 

The two women first met in 1934 when Fanny Borden, the Vassar librarian, arranged an introduction. Miss Bishop described the meeting thus: "I first met Miss Moore by appointment in 1934, in the New York Public Library. I had actually picked out a tall, eagle-nosed, beturbaned lady, distinguished-looking but proud and forbidding, as a possible Miss Moore, when to my great relief, the real one spoke up." In the course of their conversation, the Vassar senior suggested they go to the circus in two weeks and Miss Moore, who had a passion for the circus, agreed. 

The older poet played at least a tangential role in the following year in Miss Bishop`s decision not to enroll in Cornell Medical School. As she explained, "I had all the forms. But then I discovered that I would have to take German and more chemistry. I`d already published a few things and Marianne discouraged me, and I didn`t go. I just went off to Europe instead." Miss Bishop traveled extensively in Europe and lived in New York, Key West, Florida, and, for seventeen years, in Brazil. She taught briefly at the University of Washington, at Harvard for seven years, at New York University, and just prior to her death in 1979, at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 

Elizabeth Bishop won virtually every poetry prize in the country although she insisted, "They don`t mean too much." Her first book, North & South, won the Houghton Mifflin Poetry Award for 1946. In 1955, she received the Pulitzer Prize for a volume containing North & South and A Cold Spring. Her next book of poetry, Questions of Travel (1965), won the National Book Award and was followed by The Complete Poems in 1969. Geography III (1976) received the National Book Critics Circle Award. In 1976, Miss Bishop became both the first American and the first woman to win the Books Abroad/Neustadt Prize for Literature. 

In addition to her volumes of poetry, she translated a famous Brazilian diary, The Diary of Helena Morley, edited and partially translated An Anthology of Contemporary Brazilian Poetry (1972), and was a prolific contributor to The New Yorker. In 1967, Bishop was the recipient of two Guggenheim fellowships. She received honorary degrees from Adelphi, Brandeis, Brown, Dalhousie, and Princeton Universities, as well as from Smith and Amherst Colleges. A chancellor of the Academy of American Poets, Bishop was also a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and a consultant in poetry to the Library of Congress in 1949-50. 

Elizabeth Bishop died on October 6, 1979. A new edition of her poems, The Complete Poems, 1927-1979, was published in early 1983, and The Collected Prose was published in 1984. 

Of her work, Robert Lowell remarked, "Elizabeth Bishop is the contemporary poet that I admire most .... There`s a beautiful completeness to all of Bishop`s poetry. I don`t think anyone alive has a better eye than she had: The eye that sees things and the mind behind the eye that remembers." 

Source: "An Afternoon with Elizabeth Bishop" by Elizabeth Spires

Didactism, Feminism, Laureate, Modernism

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1806-1861
ENG
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
→ influenced Elizabeth Bishop
1809-1892
ENG
Alfred Lord Tennyson
→ influenced Elizabeth Bishop
1812-1889
ENG
Robert Browning
→ influenced Elizabeth Bishop
1887-1972
USA
Marianne Moore
→ influenced Elizabeth Bishop
1914-1998
MEX
Octavio Paz
→ influenced Elizabeth Bishop
1914-1965
USA
Randall Jarrell
→ praised Elizabeth Bishop
1917-1977
USA
Robert Lowell
→ friend of Elizabeth Bishop
1793-1835
ENG
Felicia Dorothea Hemans
← referenced by Elizabeth Bishop
1930-
LCA
Derek Walcott
← influenced by Elizabeth Bishop


WorkLangRating
I Am In Need Of Music
eng
69
One Art
eng
69
The Fish
eng
64
Sonnet
eng
33
Giant Toad
eng
17
Sonnet (1928)
eng
12
The Moose
eng
6
Sestina
eng
5
Casabianca
eng
3
Five Flights Up
eng
3
Lullaby For the Cat
eng
3
A Miracle For Breakfast
eng
2
Conversation
eng
2
Filling Station
eng
2
In the Waiting Room
eng
2
Lines Written In The Fannie Farmer Cookbook
eng
2
The End Of March
eng
2
Cirque D`Hiver
eng
1
Exchanging Hats
eng
1
First Death In Nova Scotia
eng
1
Giant Snail
eng
1
Love Lies Sleeping
eng
1
Rain Towards Morning
eng
1
Sandpiper
eng
1
Song for the Rainy Season
eng
1
Sonnet (1979)
eng
1
Squatter`s Children
eng
1
The Armadillo
eng
1
The Imaginary Iceberg
eng
1
The Man-moth
eng
1
Visits To St. Elizabeth`s
eng
1
A Prodigal
eng
0
A Summer’s Dream
eng
0
Anaphora
eng
0
Argument
eng
0
Arrival At Santos
eng
0
At the Fishhouses
eng
0
Cape Breton
eng
0
Chemin De Fer
eng
0
Crusoe In England
eng
0
Florida
eng
0
Insomnia
eng
0
Invitation to Miss Marianne Moore
eng
0
Large Bad Picture
eng
0
Letter To N.Y.
eng
0
Little Exercise
eng
0
Manners
eng
0
Manuelzinho
eng
0
North Haven
eng
0
O breath
eng
0
Poem
eng
0
Questions of Travel
eng
0
Roosters
eng
0
Seascape
eng
0
Sleeping on the Ceiling
eng
0
Songs for a Colored Singer
eng
0
Strayed Crab
eng
0
The Bight
eng
0
The Burglar Of Babylon
eng
0
The Colder The Air
eng
0
The Map
eng
0
The Monument
eng
0
The Shampoo
eng
0
The Unbeliever
eng
0
The Weed
eng
0
To Be Written on the Mirror in Whitewash
eng
0
Trouvée
eng
0
View of the Capitol from the Library of Congress
eng
0
While Someone Telephones
eng
0

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