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  1. The rhyme scheme used in "One Art" is ABA, which causes the first and third lines to rhyme to recur differently in each stanza. Bishop doesn't utilize fixed rhymes; instead, she makes use of several half-rhymes and slant rhymes. For instance, in the fourth tercet, the words "or" and "master" rhyme iRead more

    The rhyme scheme used in “One Art” is ABA, which causes the first and third lines to rhyme to recur differently in each stanza. Bishop doesn’t utilize fixed rhymes; instead, she makes use of several half-rhymes and slant rhymes. For instance, in the fourth tercet, the words “or” and “master” rhyme inadequately. Additionally, the words “last, or” and “master” rhyme in a mosaic pattern.

     

    One Art Summary

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  1. Symbolism: Symbolism is a poetry method in which abstract concepts, traits, or associations are represented by marks, signs, or phrases. Symbolic words have a different meaning from their actual, literal meaning. For example, The lost "mother's watch" stands for the challenging relationship Bishop hRead more

    1. Symbolism: Symbolism is a poetry method in which abstract concepts, traits, or associations are represented by marks, signs, or phrases. Symbolic words have a different meaning from their actual, literal meaning. For example, The lost “mother’s watch” stands for the challenging relationship Bishop had with her mother, who she lost when she was a young child due to her mother’s institutionalization and subsequent passing.
    2. Irony: The main irony of “One Art” is that the speaker is trying to teach readers in a very didactic and informative manner that loss is similar to an “art” and that it can be “mastered” through practice. But as the poem goes on, it becomes clear that she is attempting to justify the situation to herself to comfort herself that loss is not, in reality, a “disaster.”
    3. Imagery: The use of figurative or descriptive language to conjure an image in the readers’ thoughts is known as imagery. The imagery in stanza three includes “cities,” “realms,” “rivers,” and “continents.”

    One Art Summary

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  1. The concept that nothing lasts and that loss is a necessary component of life is explored in "One Art." The speaker asserts that with enough repetition, anyone can "perfect" the "craft" of losing and even learn to embrace it.   One Art Summary

    The concept that nothing lasts and that loss is a necessary component of life is explored in “One Art.” The speaker asserts that with enough repetition, anyone can “perfect” the “craft” of losing and even learn to embrace it.

     

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  1. Anaphora: It refers to the repetition of a word or expression in the first part of some verses. For example, “He” is repeated in the opening lines of the poem to emphasize the point such as, “He didn’t fight. He hadn’t fought at all. He hung a grunting weight.” Alliteration: Alliteration is the repeRead more

    1. Anaphora: It refers to the repetition of a word or expression in the first part of some verses. For example, “He” is repeated in the opening lines of the poem to emphasize the point such as,

    “He didn’t fight.

    He hadn’t fought at all.

    He hung a grunting weight.”

    1. Alliteration: Alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds in the same line in quick succession such as the sound of /r/ in “was rainbow, rainbow, rainbow.”
    2. Assonance: Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds in the same line such as the sound of /o/ in “was rainbow, rainbow, rainbow.”
    3. Enjambment: It is defined as a thought in verse that does not come to an end at a line break; rather, it rolls over to the next line. For example,

    “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.”

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  1. In her poem The Fish, Elizabeth Bishop demonstrates her ecological sensibility and acceptance of a coexisting relationship between humans and other species. She leaves the fish free, which reflects the poem's ecological understanding. One of her signature and illustrative poems is this one. The fishRead more

    In her poem The Fish, Elizabeth Bishop demonstrates her ecological sensibility and acceptance of a coexisting relationship between humans and other species. She leaves the fish free, which reflects the poem’s ecological understanding. One of her signature and illustrative poems is this one.

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