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Edgar Allan Poe & the Juke-Box

Last post 09-08-2006 3:55 PM by ccadmin. 4 replies.
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  • 09-06-2006 11:37 PM

    Edgar Allan Poe & the Juke-Box

    Cover image of Edgar Allan Poe & the Juke-Box

    Edgar Allan Poe & the Juke-Box:  Uncollected Poems, Drafts,
    and Fragments

    Elizabeth Bishop, Ed. Alice Quinn
    Farrar, Straus And Giroux, 2006.
    Reviewed by Jane Hoogestraat
    Professor of English

     

    Elizabeth Bishop ranks as one of the most important twentieth century poets, despite having published only a few more than a hundred poems in her lifetime.  Edgar Allan Poe & The Juke-Box adds a considerable number of poems from Bishop’s unpublished work, including the haunting lines from the title poem:

            Easily through the darkened room
            the juke-box burns; the music falls.
            Starlight, La Conga, all the dance-halls
            in the block of honkey-tonks,
            cavities in our waning moon,
            strung with bottles and blue lights
            and silvered coconuts and conches.

    This edition deepens our understanding of Bishop’s biography and of her poetic process, including (for example) sixteen drafts of the villanelle “One Art.”  An early draft begins with the prosaic “Mostly, one begins by ‘mislaying’: / keys, reading-glasses, fountain pens / - these are almost too easy to be mentioned,” lines that appear in the finished version as:  “Lose something every day.  Accept the fluster / of lost door keys, the hour badly spent. / The art of losing isn’t hard to master.”  Bishop’s poems, always formal and polished, contain equal measures of lightness and sadness.  These qualities are apparent even in drafts that she rejected, and in a poem like “Verdigris,” that the New Yorker rejected in 1950:

            Oh blue-green Seas of Greece, and in between,
            the olive-groves and copper roofs of Rome!
            The catalogues will tell you that they mean
            the time to watch for is when Time grows green.

    Angela Barker
    Instructional Technology Support Specialist
    College of Arts and Letters
  • 09-08-2006 1:27 PM In reply to

    Re: Edgar Allan Poe & the Juke-Box

    Jane,

    Thanks for the news of this collection; I hadn't seen it before, and I definitely want to take a look at it.  Isn't it good to know even Bishop was rejected?  I wondered about the ***** passage in the poem. Are you sparing some of our readers some language by Bishop that was explicit, or did she actually choose to leave this part out? I wonder because I don't recall her ever having been graphic in her diction in other poems.

    Michael Burns

     

     

  • 09-08-2006 1:42 PM In reply to

    Re: Edgar Allan Poe & the Juke-Box

    Be aware that this Community Server software includes an automated word censoring feature. Contact the Site Administrator if this feature becomes problematic.
  • 09-08-2006 3:16 PM In reply to

    Re: Edgar Allan Poe & the Juke-Box

    I'm not sure my assumption here is correct, so let me see if I understand. This notice of the automated word censoring feature is in response to my question about the ***ing phrase in the quotation from one of E. Bishop's poem, found in Dr. Hoogestraat's book review.  Is that right? If it is, is there some way we can disable this function of the software?  It seems to me to be a safeguard that wouldn't be needed for an audience that is made up of adult faculty in the College of Arts & Letters.

    Michael Burns
    English Department

  • 09-08-2006 3:55 PM In reply to

    Re: Edgar Allan Poe & the Juke-Box

    ** UPDATE **
    Strict censoring disabled for now. University policies regarding acceptable use of campus resources still apply so all posts are moderated.

     

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