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The BishopMoore Correspondence On

The Bishop/Moore Correspondence On "The Fish" Essay, Research Paper


"The Bishop / Moore


Correspondence"


Lynn Keller


… Bishop seems to have recognized that she,


like Moore, was far more observant than most people. Once she even assumes a tone of smug


complicity, implying "you and I see what others carelessly overlook," when


commenting on the obtuseness of those who label museum exhibits: "Some of their


inscriptions baffle me – a perfectly sensible crystal fish, for example, something


like a perch, labelled ‘Porpoise.’ And a young man on a Greek vase who is


obviously cutting the ends of his hair with his sword, called ‘Boy Washing Hair


(?)’" (letter of 25 January 1935). Bishop seems also to have been always


conscious that the women she was writing to was not only "the World’s Greatest


Living Observer" (a title Bishop used in her contribution to the Marianne Moore issue


of A Quarterly Review of Literature, 1948) but one of its greatest describers as


well – and therefore the most qualified judge of Bishop’s own descriptive


achievements. …


… As early as 1935 Bishop demonstrates the


knack for narrative, the interest in colorful human characters, and the playful humor that


are distinctly hers. … The following vignette … contains surprising images and


an understated, half-serious moral that bring to mind Moore’s writing, but the


casual, anecdotal manner could only be Bishop’s:


I must tell you about the beautiful tree down the


street – covered with fine yellow blossoms and the most delicate, wire-like, of green


leaves – it scarcely looks like a tree at all, but some sort of transcendental


lighting fixture. An old Negro with white hair was sitting underneath it reading the


‘Congregational Record’ and I asked him the name – Jerusalem Thorn. I said


isn’t it beautiful, and he answered me very severely, ‘It’s worth-while


looking at.’" (letter of 5 March 1938)


Yet despite the obvious differences between their


descriptive styles (and the temperaments determining them), Moore’s writing clearly


provides Bishop’s standard for successful description, the standard against which she


measures her own achievement.


[….]


The care Bishop apparently took composing her


early letters and the descriptions they contain reflects, then, not only her desire to


share with Moore intriguing or delightful experiences, but also her awareness that this


correspondence provided a unique opportunity for monitored practice in writing skills.


After all, Moore was the ideal audience: well disposed and genuinely interested,


possessing rigorous literary standards and reliable judgment; her praise, when earned, was


significant. Without in any way diminishing the genuine affection binding these two women


and the mutual rewards of their correspondence, it seems fair to regard Bishop’s


letters of the ’30s as a format for literary exercise and experiment, as vehicles for


locating her own voice and manner, for testing her audience’s response in preparation


for more public forays. The activity of composing them seems to have been part of


Bishop’s self-imposed training.


From Lynn Keller, "Words Worth a Thousand


Postcards: The Bishop / Moore Correspondence," American Literature 55.3


(October 1983), 411, 413-414.


Correspondence on "The


Fish"


1. Elizabeth Bishop to


Marianne Moore: January 14, 1939


The other day I caught a parrot fish, almost by


accident. They are ravishing fish – all iridescent, with a silver edge to each scale,


and a real bill-like mouth just like turquoise; the eye is very big and wild, and the


eyeball is turquoise too – they are very humorous-looking fish. A man on the dock


immediately scraped off three scales, then threw him back; he was sure it wouldn’t


hurt

him. I’m enclosing one [scale], if I can find it. …


From One Art: Letters of Elizabeth Bishop,


Ed. Robert Giroux (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1994), 79.


2. Elizabeth Bishop to


Marianne Moore: February 5, 1940


I have one Key West story that I must tell you.


It is more like the place than anything I can think of. The other day I went to the


china closet to get a little white bowl to put some flowers in and when I was rinsing it I


noticed some little black specks. I said to Mrs. Almyda, "I think we must have


mice" – but she took the bowl over to the light and studied it and after a while


she said, "No, them’s lizard." …


I am so much longing to see some of your new


poems. I am sending you a real "trifle" ["the Fish"]. I’m afraid


it is very bad and, if not like Robert Frost, perhaps like Ernest Hemingway! I left the


last line on so it wouldn’t be, but I don’t know …


From One Art: Letters of Elizabeth Bishop,


Ed. Robert Giroux (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1994), 87.


3. Marianne Moore to


Louise Crane: February 14, 1940


[Bishop was romantically involved with Louise


Crane and shared a house with her at Key West.]


I had a letter from Elizabeth a day or two ago,


which I am thinking of having tattooed on me – in which she tells of Mrs.


Almeyda’s identifying certain little specks in a white bowl, as "Them’s


lizard." And she enclosed a very valorous and concentrated poem about a fish. I


thought of your somewhat pensive statement, "Elizabeth is writing some poems: she is


working hard and will have more things" – when we were pondering the probability


of enough to make a book; I wondered where th fish had begun to be written, and if I have


missed any companion piece to it.


From The Selected Letters of Marianne Moore,


Ed. Bonnie Costello; Assoc. Eds. Celeste Goodridge and Cristanne Miller (New York: Alfred


A. Knopf, 1997), 397.


4. Elizabeth Bishop to


Marianne Moore: February 19, 1940


I have been reading and rereading your letter


ever since it came … And thank you for the marvelous postcard, and the very helpful


comments on "the Fish." I did as you suggested about everything except


"breathing in" (if you can remember that), which I decided to leave as it was.


"Lousy" is now "infested" and "gunwales" (which I meant to


be pronounced "gunn’ls" ) is "gunnels," which is also correct


according to the dictionary, and makes it plainer. I left off the outline of capitals [for


the first word of each line], too, and feel very ADVANCED.


From One Art: Letters of Elizabeth Bishop,


Ed. Robert Giroux (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1994), 87-88.


5. Marianne Moore to


Elizabeth Bishop: March 17, 1940


I am glad the Partisan Review wants the


article, and since the canoe trip gives a picture of Florida, you could surely send it.


And if you ask if I "could bear" to see it again and if I "have the


time" to read it, I’ll tell you a fib and say when I said I liked "The


Fish" that I meant merely the title, not the poem itself. I don’t feel I am any


real help to you and should so like to be. But in anxiety to protect the work I scrutinize


every detail.


From The Selected Letters of Marianne Moore,


Ed. Bonnie Costello; Assoc. Eds. Celeste Goodridge and Cristanne Miller (New York: Alfred


A. Knopf, 1997), 398.


6. Elizabeth Bishop to


Marianne Moore: March 14, 1940


Partisan Review has asked me to write a


"Florida Letter." … They are printing "The Fish" this month, I


think.


From One Art: Letters of Elizabeth Bishop,


Ed. Robert Giroux (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1994), 89

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