目录

  • 1 Part 1: American poetry of colonial period
    • 1.1 Anne Bradstreet
    • 1.2 Philip Freneau
  • 2 ★Part 2: American poetry of romantic period
    • 2.1 William Cullen Bryant: To a Waterfowl
    • 2.2 Edgar Allan Poe: Annabel Lee
    • 2.3 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: A Psalm of Life/The Tide Rises, the Tide Falls
    • 2.4 Walt Whitman: O Captain! My Captain!
    • 2.5 Emily Dickinson: Wild Nights—Wild Nights/I Heard a Fly buzz—When I died
  • 3 ★Part 3: American poetry of modernist period
    • 3.1 RobertFrost: The Road Not Taken/Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
    • 3.2 Carl Sandburg: Fog/Grass
    • 3.3 Wallace Stevens:Anecdote of the Jar/The Snow Man
    • 3.4 William Carlos Williams: The RedWheelbarrow
    • 3.5 Ezra Pound: Ina Station of the Metro
    • 3.6 Hilda Doolittle: Oread
  • 4 Part 4: American poetry of contemporary times
    • 4.1 LangstonHughes: The Negro Speaks of Rivers/Dreams
    • 4.2 ElizabethBishop: The Fish
  • 5 Part 5: American novel of romanticism
    • 5.1 Washington Irving: Rip Van Winkle
    • 5.2 James Fenimore Cooper: The Last ofthe Mohicans
    • 5.3 Edgar Allan Poe: The Fall of theHouse of Usher
    • 5.4 Nathaniel Hawthorne: Scarlet Letter
    • 5.5 Herman Melville: Moby Dick
  • 6 ★Part 6: American novel of realism
    • 6.1 Mark Twain: The Adventuresof Huckleberry Finn
    • 6.2 Henry James: The Portrait of a Lady
  • 7 Part 7: American novel of naturalism
    • 7.1 Stephen Crane: The Open Boat
    • 7.2 ​ Theodore Dreiser: Sister Carrie
    • 7.3 Sherwood Anderson: Winesburg, Ohio
    • 7.4 Jack London: The Call of the Wild
  • 8 ★Part 8: American novel of modernism
    • 8.1 Sinclair Lewis: Babbitt
    • 8.2 Francis Scott Fitzgerald: The GreatGatsby
    • 8.3 ​William Faulkner: The Sound and the Fury
    • 8.4 ​Ernest Hemingway: The Sun Also Rises
    • 8.5 John Steinbeck: The Grapes of Wrath
  • 9 Part 9: American novel since 1945
    • 9.1 Jerome Salinger: The Cather in theRye
    • 9.2 Toni Morrison: The Bluest Eye
  • 10 Part 10: Critical perception of the changing society and life in American Drama
    • 10.1 Eugene O’Neil:Long Day’s Journey into Night
    • 10.2 Arthur Asher Miller: Death of a Salesman
ElizabethBishop: The Fish


ElizabethBishop: The Fish


Elizabeth Bishop

1911–1979

Elizabeth Bishop was born in 1911 in Worcester, Massachusetts and grew up there and in Nova Scotia. Her father died before she was a year old and her mother suffered seriously from mental illness; she was committed to an institution when Bishop was five. Raised first by her maternal grandparents in Nova Scotia, Bishop’s wealthy paternal grandparents eventually brought her to live in Massachusetts. During her lifetime Bishop was a respected yet somewhat obscure figure in the world of American literature. Since her death in 1979, however, her reputation has grown to the point that many critics, like Larry Rohter in the New York Times, have referred to her as “one of the most important American poets” of the 20th century. Bishop was a perfectionist who did not write prolifically, preferring instead to spend long periods of time polishing her work. She published only 101 poems during her lifetime. 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.

Bishop was educated at the elite Walnut Hills School for Girls and Vassar College. Her years at Vassar were tremendously important to Bishop. There she met Marianne Moore, a fellow poet who also became a lifelong friend. Working with a group of students that included Mary McCarthy, Eleanor Clark, and Margaret Miller, she founded the short-lived but influential literary journal Con Spirito, which was conceived as an alternative to the well-established Vassar Review. After graduating, Bishop lived in New York and traveled extensively in France, Spain, Ireland, Italy, and North Africa. Her poetry is filled with descriptions of her journeys and the sights she saw. In 1938, she moved to Key West, where she wrote many of the poems that eventually were collected in her first volume North and South (1946). Her second poetry collection, Poems: North & South/A Cold Spring (1955) received the Pulitzer Prize. In 1944 she left Key West, and for 14 years she lived in Brazil with her lover, the architect Lota de Macedo Soares in Pétropolis. After Soares took her own life in 1967, Bishop spent less time in Brazil than in New York, San Francisco, and Massachusetts, where she took a teaching position at Harvard in 1970. That same year, she received a National Book Award in Poetry for The Complete Poems. Her reputation increased greatly in the years just prior to her death, particularly after the 1976 publication of Geography III and her winning of the Neustadt International Prize for Literature.

Bishop worked as a painter as well as a poet, and her verse, like visual art, is known for its ability to capture significant scenes. Though she was independently wealthy and thus enjoyed a life of some privilege, much of her poetry celebrates working-class settings: busy factories, farms, and fishing villages. Analyzing her small but significant body of work for Bold Type, Ernie Hilbert wrote: “Bishop’s poetics is one distinguished by tranquil observation, craft-like accuracy, care for the small things of the world, a miniaturist’s discretion and attention. Unlike the pert and wooly poetry that came to dominate American literature by the second half of her life, her poems are balanced like Alexander Calder mobiles, turning so subtly as to seem almost still at first, every element, every weight of meaning and song, poised flawlessly against the next.”


The Fish 

by Elizabeth Bishop

I caught a tremendous fish

and held him beside the boat
half out of water, with my hook
fast in a corner of his mouth.
He didn't fight.
He hadn't fought at all.
He hung a grunting weight,
battered and venerable
and homely. Here and there
his brown skin hung in strips
like ancient wallpaper,
and its pattern of darker brown
was like wallpaper:
shapes like full-blown roses
stained and lost through age.
He was speckled and barnacles,
fine rosettes of lime,
and infested
with tiny white sea-lice,
and underneath two or three
rags of green weed hung down.
While his gills were breathing in
the terrible oxygen
--the frightening gills,
fresh and crisp with blood,
that can cut so badly--
I thought of the coarse white flesh
packed in like feathers,
the big bones and the little bones,
the dramatic reds and blacks
of his shiny entrails,
and the pink swim-bladder
like a big peony.
I looked into his eyes
which were far larger than mine
but shallower, and yellowed,
the irises backed and packed
with tarnished tinfoil
seen through the lenses
of old scratched isinglass.
They shifted a little, but not
to return my stare.
--It was more like the tipping
of an object toward the light.
I admired his sullen face,
the mechanism of his jaw,
and then I saw
that from his lower lip
--if you could call it a lip
grim, wet, and weaponlike,
hung five old pieces of fish-line,
or four and a wire leader
with the swivel still attached,
with all their five big hooks
grown firmly in his mouth.
A green line, frayed at the end
where he broke it, two heavier lines,
and a fine black thread
still crimped from the strain and snap
when it broke and he got away.
Like medals with their ribbons
frayed and wavering,
a five-haired beard of wisdom
trailing from his aching jaw.
I stared and stared
and victory filled up
the little rented boat,
from the pool of bilge
where oil had spread a rainbow
around the rusted engine
to the bailer rusted orange,
the sun-cracked thwarts,
the oarlocks on their strings,
the gunnels--until everything
was rainbow, rainbow, rainbow!
And I let the fish go.


The Armadillo

BY ELIZABETH BISHOP


for Robert Lowell


This is the time of year

when almost every night

the frail, illegal fire balloons appear.

Climbing the mountain height,

rising toward a saint

still honored in these parts,

the paper chambers flush and fill with light

that comes and goes, like hearts.

Once up against the sky it's hard

to tell them from the stars—

planets, that is—the tinted ones:

Venus going down, or Mars,

or the pale green one. With a wind,

they flare and falter, wobble and toss;

but if it's still they steer between

the kite sticks of the Southern Cross,

receding, dwindling, solemnly

and steadily forsaking us,

or, in the downdraft from a peak,

suddenly turning dangerous.

Last night another big one fell.

It splattered like an egg of fire

against the cliff behind the house.

The flame ran down. We saw the pair

of owls who nest there flying up

and up, their whirling black-and-white

stained bright pink underneath, until

they shrieked up out of sight.

The ancient owls' nest must have burned.

Hastily, all alone,

a glistening armadillo left the scene,

rose-flecked, head down, tail down,

and then a baby rabbit jumped out,

short-eared, to our surprise.

So soft!—a handful of intangible ash

with fixed, ignited eyes.

Too pretty, dreamlike mimicry!

O falling fire and piercing cry

and panic, and a weak mailed fist

clenched ignorant against the sky!



Preview questions:

1. What is the poetess's attitude toward the fish?

2. Why does the speaker let the fish go at the end of the poem?

3. What is the symbolic meaning of“rainbow”in the poem?

4. What are the major diversities of postwar American poetry? And name a few of their representative poets.