Bibliography Library Collections Elizabeth Bishop Societies Announcements and Calls for Papers Selected Papers from Symposium, Vassar College 1994 Related Links 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 her mother's permanent hospitalization in a Nova Scotian sanitarium. She attended ...
projects.vassar.edu/bishop
Elizabeth Bishop (1911-1979) | About Elizabeth Bishop | The Bishop / Moore Correspondence on The Fish | On The Fish | On The Man-Moth | On At the Fishhouses | On Filling Station | On Questions of Travel | On The Armadillo | On In the Waiting Room | On Pink Dog | On Crusoe in England | On One Art | The Drafts of One Art --by Brett Candlish Millier | Comparing Bishop's At ...
www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/a_f/bishop/bishop.htm
Lloyd Schwartz introduces and reads Sonnett by Elizabeth Bishop, and is joined by Gail Mazur, Robert Pinsky, and Mark Strand ...
www.theatlantic.com/unbound/poetry/soundings/bishop.htm
Modern Poetry Elizabeth Bishop Elizabeth Bishop, born in Worcester, Massachusetts in 1911, had a difficult childhood: her father died when she was very young, and while still in early childhood her mother was permanently hospitalized in a sanitarium. She spent her childhood years living with her grandparents in Nova Scotia, and with relatives in Massachusetts. Bishop attended Vassar College, and ...
www.uvm.edu/~sgutman/Bishop.html
!@ AMERICAN POETRY Elizabeth Bishop: 1911-1979 !@ The photo is from the webpage of The Academy of American Poets !@ Biography Web Pages Poetic Style Bishop and Brazil Online Texts Online Review of ! One Art! Online Forum (UTexas) Guiding Questions Online Essays Selected Bibliography !@ ONLINE JOURNAL !@ !@ Biography Web Pages The Elizabeth Bishop Page on the Vassar College web site gives a full ...
www.eng.fju.edu.tw/English_Literature/us_poetry/Bishop
Poems by Theodore Roethke and Elizabeth Bishop By Robert Hass August 9, 1998 A reader from Maryland writes to ask where the villanelle came from. I looked it up: a very old Italian folk song form brought into medieval French poetry and then brought into English by poets at the end of the 19th century. It is based on an intricate rhyme scheme and a schematic repetition of key lines. The effect is ...
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