Morris Gilbert Bishop (1893-1973) was a scholar, historian, biographer, author, and humorist. He was associated with Cornell University as alumnus, Professor of Romance Literature, and University Historian. Bishop wrote the preeminent history of the university, A History of Cornell.
He also wrote biographies of Pascal, Champlain, La Rochefoucauld, Petrarch, and St. Francis, as well as his 1928 book, A Gallery of Eccentrics, which profiled twelve unusual individuals. During the late 1950s and early 1960s his reviews of books on historical topics often appeared in The New York Times. His 1968 history of the Middle Ages is still in print under the title The Middle Ages.
His obituary in The New York Times mentions that he was a very facile composer of limericks, and notes:
Bishop's comic poems appeared in magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post, The New Yorker, and Life. They were collected in two volumes, Paramount Poems (subtitled "If it isn't a PARAMOUNT it isn't a poem"), and Spilt Milk.
"How to Treat Elves," probably his best-known poem, describes a conversation with "The wee-est little elf." When asked what he does, the elf tells the narrator "'I dance 'n fwolic about,' said he, "'n scuttle about and play.'" A few stanzas describe his activities surprising butterflies, "fwigtening" Mr. Mole by jumping out and saying "Boo," and swinging on cobwebs. He asks the narrator "what do you think of that?" The narrator replies:
It gives me sharp and shooting pains
To listen to such drool;
I lifted up my foot and squashed
The God damn little fool.
Taking up Trevelyan's challenge to write didactic poetry, like Virgil's Georgics, on a modern subject, Bishop produced "Gas and Hot Air." It describes the operation of a car engine; "Vacuum pulls me; and I come! I come!" cries the gasoline, which reaches
the secret bridal chamber where
The earth-born gas first comes to kiss its bride,
The heaven-born and yet inviolate air
Which is, on this year's models, purified.
"Ozymandias Revisited" reproduces the first two stanzas of Shelley's poem verbatim, then closes:
Cornell University alumni | Cornell University faculty | 1893 births | 1973 deaths
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