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Journal article

Peripatetic poetry: (un-)generous tributes and (un-)endings in Leontia Flynn, Elizabeth Bishop, and W.B. Yeats

Abstract:
While we can demarcate the literal end of a poem on a piece of paper, the endings of poems are many and varied, and linked to their potentially un-ending conversations with other works. In the case of the Northern Irish poet Leontia Flynn, her conversations with Bishop are complex, finding expression in her sonnet “Elizabeth Bishop,” in the ways that she characterises Bishop, and in how she mediates between Bishop and W.B. Yeats. Both Flynn and Bishop are readers of Yeats, and they meet him at the level of poet and poem, complicating their relationships still further. Jonathan Ellis describes how Seamus Heaney wrote a “generous tribute” to Bishop in the form of a poem, but this article asks what happens when such “tributes” are more “ungenerous” in nature, and what they tell us about the ways in which Flynn, Bishop and Yeats speak to each other through their poems.
Publication status:
Accepted
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
ContEd
Department:
Continuing Education
Oxford college:
Kellogg College
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0003-3981-4426


Publisher:
Penn State University Press
Journal:
Bishop-Lowell Studies More from this journal
Acceptance date:
2025-08-20
EISSN:
2692-949X
ISSN:
2692-9481


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
2287152
Local pid:
pubs:2287152
Deposit date:
2025-09-09

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