Sestina
Sestina
Sestina
The Poem
In "Sestina," Elizabeth Bishop tells a
painful story of a grandmother and a child
living with loss. The story, set in a kitchen
on a rainy late afternoon in September,
features two actions: having tea and
drawing. Although the woman tries to
remain cheerful and thus protect the child,
her tears give away her sadness. The
child, meanwhile, not only observes these
troubling signs but also draws a house
that makes her proud. By the final nine
lines of the poem, a surprising thing
happens, unnoticed by the grandmother.
The buttons in the drawing become "little
moons" and "fall down like tears/ . . . into
the flower bed the child/ has carefully
placed" in the drawing. Thus, while the
characters are very close to one another,
there is a contrast-even an oppositionbetween them. The grandmother tries to
make the desolate day pleasant, while the
child imagines and draws a world
preoccupied with tears.
Read aloud, "Sestina" assumes a
wondering, storybook tone, especially as
the more fanciful details emerge. The
teakettle produces "tears" that "dance."
The almanac, which both provides the
grandmother with jokes and reinforces her
sense of doom, "hovers" in a "Birdlike"
fashion. Both the almanac and the stove
speak.
These details distinguish the child's
perspective from the grandmother's. In
the opening lines, the grandmother
devotes considerable effort to amusing
the child. However, as the poem
continues, the child's role comes to the
fore, first through his or her perceptions
and then through his or her drawing. The
result is subversive, the child's intuition
undercutting the will of the woman. The
locus of the struggle is revealed in
adjectives: "small hard," "mad," "hot
Elizabeth Bishop
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Elizabeth Bishop (February 8, 1911
October 6, 1979) was an American poet
and short-story writer. She was the Poet
Laureate of the United Statesfrom 1949 to
1950, the Pulitzer Prize winner for Poetry
in 1956,[1] the National Book
Award winner in 1970, and the recipient of
the Neustadt International Prize for
Literature in 1976 .[2]
Elizabeth Bishop, an only child, was born
in Worcester, Massachusetts. After her
father, a successful builder, died when she
was eight months old, Bishops mother
became mentally ill and was
institutionalized in 1916. (Bishop would