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Elizabeth BishopA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The poem is written in free verse, meaning it has no truly fixed meter or rhyme scheme. However, the poem still utilizes some rhyme and repetition to create rhythm and flow.
Each six-line stanza contains a few end rhymes to help connect the units. The first stanza rhymes “miles” (Line 2) with “smiles” (Line 4); the second stanza rhymes “hell” (Line 8), “dwell” (Line 10), and “well” (Line 12); and the final stanza rhymes “night” (Line 14) with “right” (Lines 16) and “sea” (Line 17) with “me” (Line 18).
But more powerful than the rhymes is Bishop’s use of repetition. Throughout the poem, she repeats words, letters, and sounds to bring the poem together. For example, consider the first stanza. In these first two lines, Bishop uses alliteration, repeating the “m” sound:
The moon in the bureau mirror
looks out a million miles
In these next two lines, she repeats the “p” and “s” sounds (consonance) as well as the word “never”:
(and perhaps with pride, at herself,
but she never, never smiles)
In these last two lines, she repeats the word “sleep.
By Elizabeth Bishop
A Miracle for Breakfast
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Arrival at Santos
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Crusoe in England
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Exchanging Hats
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First Death in Nova Scotia
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Five Flights Up
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One Art
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Sandpiper
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Sestina
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The Armadillo
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The Fish
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The Imaginary Iceberg
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The Moose
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The Mountain
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The Shampoo
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