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Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins (Version 2) Audiobook

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01/10/2024
Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins (Version 2) cover
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Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844–1889) was one of the most innovative of English Victorian poets, best known now for his vivid and original imagery of the natural world in verses such as “The Windhover” and “Pied Beauty”.
Hopkins was a master of miniaturisation and condensation. His poetry is characterised by freshness, concentrated originality and often unconventional syntax in which words may have multiple shades of meaning. One of his most important innovations was what he called “sprung rhythm”, a style intended to be read aloud in which — like natural speech — the stressed syllables ‘spring’ between a variable number of unstressed syllables, and in which the poetic lines are defined not by number of syllables but by number of stresses.
At the age of 24 Hopkins converted to Catholicism and began training as a Jesuit priest. For seven years he wrote no poetry at all, believing that he was not called by God to do so. This period ended with a concentrated explosion of originality with “The Wreck of the Deutschland”, his greatest and longest poem (number 4 in this collection) which is dedicated to the memory of five nuns who lost their lives while attempting the sea passage from Germany to England in 1875. Sometimes considered ‘difficult’ by readers who approach it in printed form, the poem’s outlines become clearer when read aloud. It is divided into two sections, an introductory part in which the poet discourses with wonder on the sudden return of his poetic muse after so many fallow years; and a second part in which he describes with dramatic pace the fate of the ship as it hurtles in the storm and snow to its doom on the Kentish sands. At its heart the poem celebrates, in extraordinarily vivid and imaginative terms, the spiritual vision of a nun whose entire attention is absorbed by Christ even as all around her is chaos and terror.
Most of Hopkins’ poetry was unpublished and completely unknown until nearly 30 years after his death when in 1918 Robert Bridges, his old friend and by then Poet Laureate, brought out this book. Hopkins’ originality was soon recognised, and his verse has had a marked influence on many later poets including TS Eliot, Dylan Thomas, WH Auden, Stephen Spender and Cecil Day-Lewis. (Michael Maggs)

 
 

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1:
Author's Preface
2:
For a Picture of St. Dorothea
3:
Heaven—Haven
4:
The Habit of Perfection
5:
The Wreck of the Deutschland
6:
Penmaen Pool
7:
The Silver Jubilee
8:
God’s Grandeur
9:
The Starlight Night
10:
Spring
11:
The Lantern out of Doors
12:
The Sea and the Skylark
13:
The Windhover
14:
Pied Beauty
15:
Hurrahing in Harvest
16:
The Caged Skylark
17:
In the Valley of the Elwy
18:
The Loss of the Eurydice
19:
The May Magnificat
20:
Binsey Poplars
21:
Duns Scotus’s Oxford
22:
Henry Purcell
23:
Peace
24:
The Bugler’s First Communion
25:
Morning Midday and Evening Sacrifice
26:
Andromeda
27:
The Candle Indoors
28:
The Handsome Heart
29:
At the Wedding March
30:
Felix Randal
31:
Brothers
32:
Spring and Fall
33:
Spelt from Sibyl’s Leaves
34:
Inversnaid
35:
'As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame'
36:
Ribblesdale
37:
The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo
38:
The Blessed Virgin compared to the Air we Breathe
39:
To what serves Mortal Beauty?
40:
[The Soldier]
41:
[Carrion Comfort]
42:
'No worst, there is none'
43:
Tom’s Garland
44:
Harry Ploughman
45:
'To seem the stranger lies my lot, my life'
46:
'I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day'
47:
'Patience, hard thing! the hard thing but to pray'
48:
'My own heart let me have more have pity on'
49:
That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire and of the comfort of the Resurrection
50:
St. Alphonsus Rodriguez
51:
'Thou art indeed just, Lord, if I contend'
52:
To R. B.
53:
Summa
54:
'What being in rank-old nature should earlier have that breath been'
55:
On the Portrait of Two Beautiful Young People
56:
'The sea took pity: it interposed with doom'
57:
[Ash-boughs]
58:
'Hope holds to Christ the mind’s own mirror out'
59:
St. Winefred’s Well
60:
'What shall I do for the land that bred me'
61:
'The times are nightfall, look, their light grows less'
62:
Cheery Beggar
63:
'Denis, whose motionable, alert, most vaulting wit'
64:
'The furl of fresh-leaved dogrose'
65:
The Woodlark
66:
Moonrise
67:
'Repeat that, repeat'
68:
On a piece of music
69:
'The child is father to the man'
70:
'The shepherd’s brow, fronting forked lightning'
71:
To his Watch
72:
'Strike, churl; hurl, cheerless wind'
73:
Epithalamion
74:
'Thee, God, I come from, to thee go'
75:
'To him who ever thought with love of me'