Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins by Gerard Manley Hopkins
Read "Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins by Gerard Manley Hopkins" Online
This book is available in the public domain. Start reading the digital edition below.
START READING FULL BOOKBook Preview
A short preview of the book’s content is shown below to give you an idea of its style and themes.
Okay, let's be clear: there's no 'plot' here in the normal sense. You won't follow a detective or a love story. Instead, the 'story' is the inner life of one incredibly intense man. Gerard Manley Hopkins was a poet and a priest in the 1800s. The book collects his work, which often feels like a series of urgent, beautiful reports from the front lines of his own mind.
The Story
Hopkins saw the world in a way that left him breathless. A windhover (a kind of hawk) wasn't just a bird; it was a manifestation of Christ's glory. A grove of trees was a living, breathing community. But he also felt profound loneliness and spiritual dryness, what he called 'the dearest freshness deep down things' sometimes feeling just out of reach. The 'narrative' arc is the push and pull between these ecstatic moments of connection with nature and his disciplined, often difficult, religious life. His most famous poems, like 'The Windhover' and 'God's Grandeur', are explosions of joy. Others, like the sonnets he wrote later in life (the so-called 'terrible sonnets'), are raw, honest looks at despair. The story is his lifelong attempt to bridge the gap between what he felt and what he believed.
Why You Should Read It
You should read this because Hopkins makes you see and hear the world differently. He doesn't just describe a blue sky; he gives you 'skies of couple-colour as a brinded cow.' His language is physical. You feel the 'shock' and 'thrill' of his rhythms. Reading him is an active experience—you have to lean in, sound the words out loud, and let the strange music work on you. It's not always easy, but the reward is a sense of wonder that feels earned. He finds the divine not in distant heavens, but in the speckled pattern of a trout or the fresh, coal-blackened landscape of industrial England. He finds faith not by ignoring doubt, but by staring right at it.
Final Verdict
This book is perfect for anyone who's ever looked at something beautiful and felt a pang of sadness, or for anyone who loves language and wants to see it stretched to its limits. It's for readers who don't mind working a little for their beauty. If you enjoy the precise wildness of Emily Dickinson or the spiritual searching of Mary Oliver, you'll find a kindred spirit in Hopkins. Just be ready to read slowly, maybe even aloud, and let this Victorian priest show you the fire in the everyday world.
Legal analysis indicates this work is in the public domain. Thank you for supporting open literature.
Ashley Nguyen
1 year agoI didn't expect much, but the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged. I will read more from this author.
Elijah Jackson
2 years agoThis is one of those stories where the plot twists are genuinely surprising. A true masterpiece.