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  1. The Armadillo. By Elizabeth Bishop. for Robert Lowell. This is the time of year. when almost every night. the frail, illegal fire balloons appear. Climbing the mountain height, rising toward a saint. still honored in these parts,

    • Summary of The Armadillo
    • Structure of The Armadillo
    • Poetic Techniques
    • Analysis of The Armadillo

    The poem takes the reader through the previous night’s events. First, the speakerfocuses on the beauty of the balloons and how they appear against the night sky. They mimic the stars and the planets. But, when they fall, they’re deadly. Like a cracked egg one fell behind her house. She went out to look at it and noted the terror the fire struck int...

    ‘The Armadillo’ by Elizabeth Bishop is a ten stanza poem that’s divided into quatrains. The lines follow a structured rhyme schemeof ABAB or ABCB, and so on, changing end sounds as the poet saw fit. There are moments in which the rhyme scheme is not quite perfect, and additionally, instances in which Bishop makes use of half-rhyme. Also known as sl...

    Bishop makes use of several poetic techniques in ‘The Armadillo’. These include alliteration, simile, enjambment, and caesura. The first, alliteration, occurs when words are used in succession, or at least appear close together, and begin with the same letter. For example, “frail” and “fire” in line three of the first stanza and “downdraft” and “da...

    Stanza One

    In the first stanza of ‘The Armadillo,’ the speaker begins by stating simply that it’s the time of year in which “illegal fire balloons appear”. The location is not made clear, nor is the reason why the balloons are let off. (The second line does shed some light on this though.) The speaker refers to these balloons as “illegal”. While at first, it seems strange that this might be the case, as the poem goes on and the second half begins, the reasoning behind their illegality is cleared up, at...

    Stanza Two

    In the second stanza of ‘The Armadillo,’ the speaker continues describing what happens when the balloons are released into the sky. They rise up “toward a saint”. This provides the reader with a little bit of information about why the balloons are being released in the first place. They’re let go to honour a saint that’s specific to this part of the world (although it’s unclear what place the speaker is thinking about). With her characteristic dedication to detail, the poet goes into the mech...

    Stanza Three

    Now, the balloons are up in the sky and the speaker describes their beauty against the night’s darkness. There is something transcendent and spiritual about this process. The balloons lift into the distance until it’s hard “to tell them from the stars”. They blend in as if they too have been there for thousands of years and will outlive humanity. But, this is not the case. There are some, the speaker points out, that makes her think more of the planets. They are tinted as specific planets are...

    • Female
    • October 9, 1995
    • Poetry Analyst And Editor
  2. 13 de nov. de 2022 · Hastily, all alone, a glistening armadillo left the scene, rose-flecked, head down, tail down, and then a baby rabbit jumped out, short -eared, to our surprise. So soft!—a handful of intangible ash with fixed, ignited eyes.

  3. 5 de ene. de 2019 · The Armadillo by Elizabeth Bishop is an eye-opening poem about the actions of mankind and the disastrous consequences of those actions on unsuspecting fellow creatures.

  4. Elizabeth Bishop’s “The Armadillo” consists of ten rhymed quatrains in which the speaker describes the fire balloons that some devout persons release at night to celebrate a local saint,...

  5. The Armadillo. For Robert Lowell. This is the time of year. when almost every night. the frail, illegal fire balloons appear. Climbing the mountain height, rising toward a saint. still honored in these parts, the paper chambers flush and fill with light.

  6. The Armadillo, by Elizabeth Bishop | poems, essays, and short stories in Poeticous. For Robert Lowell. Penelope Laurens. A well-modulated lyric like "The Armadillo" demonstrates how the formal qualities of Bishop's poetry help to hold the reader's emotional response in check.