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Bishop, Elizabeth. (1911 - 1979) [Bidart, Frank. (b. 1939)][Watch] Auguste Saltzman, Chaux de Fonds. An 18K gold key wind full hunter pocket watch - EX-ELIZABETH BISHOP.
Ca. 1865 full hunters case pocket watch in 18K yellow gold case, a gift from the grandfather to the father of American poet Elizabeth Bishop. Signed Auguste Saltzman, Chaux-de-Fonds, No. 3906, circa 1865. 55mm.  Used by Elizabeth Bishop, subsequently gifted to her close friend and fellow poet, Frank Bidart. 

Engine turned Swiss lever, cut and compensated bi-metallic balance, No.3906, patented Sept 1859; Dial: White, black Roman numerals, black outer minute track, subsidiary seconds at 6, blued stylised hands. In high quality American 18k gold engine-turned case with etched pattern and initials WTB inset to front panel.  Inside front case stamped "Warranted 18 Carat Fine / 3906 / 153" with additional difficult to identify numbers lightly inscribed by hand in several locations on plate: 4985-C7, 316-5 and 2506/22. Inside movement cover signed "Auguste Saltzman / Chaud de Fonds / No. 3906" surrounding presentation engraving " William T. Bishop / From Father / Jan. 5th / 1893." In overall good condition with a small dent to the rear case, a number of small cracks or chips to the porcelain dial and light scratching and stains to the outer case.  The watch runs and keeps good time, but since we are not watch experts we suggest you may wish to have the watch professionally cleaned. We will include an after-market winding key.

A 21st birthday gift to the father of American poet, Elizabeth Bishop. Her formative years, though financially secure, were rendered emotionally unstable due to family loss. She was an only child, born on 8th February 1911 in Worcester, Massachusetts. Her father, William T. Bishop (1872 - 1911), who had part-Canadian ancestry, belonged to a wealthy Massachusetts family of builders. Her mother, Gertrude Bishop née Boomer, was a Canadian from Nova Scotia whose family were considerably less prosperous than her husband’s. William Bishop, who suffered from Bright’s Disease, died in October 1911, aged thirty-nine, after a marriage which had lasted a mere three-and-a-half years, his daughter being then only eight months old. Her mother was institutionalized in 1916 with mental illness.

During her lifetime, poet Elizabeth Bishop was a respected yet somewhat obscure figure in the world of American literature. Since her death in 1979, however, her reputation has grown to the point that many critics, like Larry Rohter in the New York Times, have referred to her as "one of the most important American poets" of the 20th century. Bishop was a perfectionist who did not write prolifically, preferring instead to spend long periods of time polishing her work. Her status as one of the greatest American poets of the 20th century is based on the smallest of oeuvres. Some 70 poems were published in her lifetime in four very slim volumes. Her verse is marked by precise descriptions of the physical world and an air of poetic serenity, but her underlying themes include the struggle to find a sense of belonging, and the human experiences of grief and longing. She died in 1979, aware that her reputation was steadily increasing, eclipsing that of her close friend and fellow poet Robert Lowell. Since her death and the publication of two superb volumes of her correspondence, One Art and Words in Air(letters between her and Lowell) it has grown ever more secure. In the select pantheon of 20th-century poets writing in English, she is placed with TS Eliot, WB Yeats, Wallace Stevens and WH Auden. Her poems often took her years to write and complete, and their formal perfection and the simple, limpid accuracy of their language have always drawn the admiration of other poets. John Ashbery called her "the writer's writer's writer."

From the collection of the important American poet Frank Bidart, who received the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, the Griffin Poetry Prize Lifetime Recognition Award, and the 2017 National Book Award for Poetry for his book Half-light: Collected Poems 1965–2016. Frank Bidart was a student and collaborator of Robert Lowell, eventually becoming a close friend and amanuensis to the elder poet, later co-editing Lowell's Collected Poems. It was through Lowell that Bidart met Elizabeth Bishop, and "Lowell and Bishop became muses of a sort for Bidart...Lowell and Bishop were less teachers than parents of his own choosing, who encouraged him to become the artist he couldn’t be back home. 'I knew that knowing them—and the fact that, in some sense, they had needed me, an eager kid from Bakersfield obsessed with poetry and art, in their life—was the most unlikely gift.'" (Hilton Als, "Frank Bidart's Poetry of Saying the Unsaid," New Yorker magazine, September 4, 2017)

Bishop, Elizabeth. (1911 - 1979) [Bidart, Frank. (b. 1939)][Watch] Auguste Saltzman, Chaux de Fonds An 18K gold key wind full hunter pocket watch - EX-ELIZABETH BISHOP

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Bishop, Elizabeth. (1911 - 1979) [Bidart, Frank. (b. 1939)][Watch] Auguste Saltzman, Chaux de Fonds. An 18K gold key wind full hunter pocket watch - EX-ELIZABETH BISHOP.
Ca. 1865 full hunters case pocket watch in 18K yellow gold case, a gift from the grandfather to the father of American poet Elizabeth Bishop. Signed Auguste Saltzman, Chaux-de-Fonds, No. 3906, circa 1865. 55mm.  Used by Elizabeth Bishop, subsequently gifted to her close friend and fellow poet, Frank Bidart. 

Engine turned Swiss lever, cut and compensated bi-metallic balance, No.3906, patented Sept 1859; Dial: White, black Roman numerals, black outer minute track, subsidiary seconds at 6, blued stylised hands. In high quality American 18k gold engine-turned case with etched pattern and initials WTB inset to front panel.  Inside front case stamped "Warranted 18 Carat Fine / 3906 / 153" with additional difficult to identify numbers lightly inscribed by hand in several locations on plate: 4985-C7, 316-5 and 2506/22. Inside movement cover signed "Auguste Saltzman / Chaud de Fonds / No. 3906" surrounding presentation engraving " William T. Bishop / From Father / Jan. 5th / 1893." In overall good condition with a small dent to the rear case, a number of small cracks or chips to the porcelain dial and light scratching and stains to the outer case.  The watch runs and keeps good time, but since we are not watch experts we suggest you may wish to have the watch professionally cleaned. We will include an after-market winding key.

A 21st birthday gift to the father of American poet, Elizabeth Bishop. Her formative years, though financially secure, were rendered emotionally unstable due to family loss. She was an only child, born on 8th February 1911 in Worcester, Massachusetts. Her father, William T. Bishop (1872 - 1911), who had part-Canadian ancestry, belonged to a wealthy Massachusetts family of builders. Her mother, Gertrude Bishop née Boomer, was a Canadian from Nova Scotia whose family were considerably less prosperous than her husband’s. William Bishop, who suffered from Bright’s Disease, died in October 1911, aged thirty-nine, after a marriage which had lasted a mere three-and-a-half years, his daughter being then only eight months old. Her mother was institutionalized in 1916 with mental illness.

During her lifetime, poet Elizabeth Bishop was a respected yet somewhat obscure figure in the world of American literature. Since her death in 1979, however, her reputation has grown to the point that many critics, like Larry Rohter in the New York Times, have referred to her as "one of the most important American poets" of the 20th century. Bishop was a perfectionist who did not write prolifically, preferring instead to spend long periods of time polishing her work. Her status as one of the greatest American poets of the 20th century is based on the smallest of oeuvres. Some 70 poems were published in her lifetime in four very slim volumes. Her verse is marked by precise descriptions of the physical world and an air of poetic serenity, but her underlying themes include the struggle to find a sense of belonging, and the human experiences of grief and longing. She died in 1979, aware that her reputation was steadily increasing, eclipsing that of her close friend and fellow poet Robert Lowell. Since her death and the publication of two superb volumes of her correspondence, One Art and Words in Air(letters between her and Lowell) it has grown ever more secure. In the select pantheon of 20th-century poets writing in English, she is placed with TS Eliot, WB Yeats, Wallace Stevens and WH Auden. Her poems often took her years to write and complete, and their formal perfection and the simple, limpid accuracy of their language have always drawn the admiration of other poets. John Ashbery called her "the writer's writer's writer."

From the collection of the important American poet Frank Bidart, who received the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, the Griffin Poetry Prize Lifetime Recognition Award, and the 2017 National Book Award for Poetry for his book Half-light: Collected Poems 1965–2016. Frank Bidart was a student and collaborator of Robert Lowell, eventually becoming a close friend and amanuensis to the elder poet, later co-editing Lowell's Collected Poems. It was through Lowell that Bidart met Elizabeth Bishop, and "Lowell and Bishop became muses of a sort for Bidart...Lowell and Bishop were less teachers than parents of his own choosing, who encouraged him to become the artist he couldn’t be back home. 'I knew that knowing them—and the fact that, in some sense, they had needed me, an eager kid from Bakersfield obsessed with poetry and art, in their life—was the most unlikely gift.'" (Hilton Als, "Frank Bidart's Poetry of Saying the Unsaid," New Yorker magazine, September 4, 2017)