The Spiritual Poetry of Gerard Hopkins (1844 - 1889)

Par : Gabriel Harvey
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8230975267
  • EAN9798230975267
  • Date de parution11/02/2025
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurIndependently Published

Résumé

This book offers a comprehensive and deeply analytical exploration of Gerard Manley Hopkins's poetry, focusing on the intersection of his artistic creativity, theological insight, and personal spiritual struggles. Hopkins, a Jesuit priest and poet, navigates the complexities of faith, suffering, and divine presence through a series of lyrical, intellectually rich poems that have influenced generations of poets and theologians.
The book delves into his innovative use of language, particularly sprung rhythm, his theological concepts such as inscape and instress, and his understanding of nature as a reflection of divine beauty and power. Central to this analysis is the tension between Hopkins's religious devotion and his artistic vocation, a struggle reflected in his deeply personal terrible sonnets, which articulate a profound engagement with divine silence and spiritual desolation.
Each chapter addresses a specific theme in Hopkins's poetry, including his radical reinterpretation of natural beauty, his engagement with Catholic theology, his exploration of divine absence, and the complex balance between art and faith. Drawing on primary sources such as his letters, journals, and theological writings, this book also situates Hopkins within the broader context of Catholic mysticism and the Victorian poetic landscape, highlighting his influence on modernist poets like T.
S. Eliot and W. H. Auden. Ultimately, the work reveals Hopkins as a poet whose engagement with the divine is as much about wrestling with the complexities of faith as it is about celebrating the spiritual and aesthetic beauty of the world. His poetry invites readers into an intimate dialogue between the human soul and the divine, where beauty and suffering coexist, and the search for meaning is both a theological and an artistic journey.
This book offers a comprehensive and deeply analytical exploration of Gerard Manley Hopkins's poetry, focusing on the intersection of his artistic creativity, theological insight, and personal spiritual struggles. Hopkins, a Jesuit priest and poet, navigates the complexities of faith, suffering, and divine presence through a series of lyrical, intellectually rich poems that have influenced generations of poets and theologians.
The book delves into his innovative use of language, particularly sprung rhythm, his theological concepts such as inscape and instress, and his understanding of nature as a reflection of divine beauty and power. Central to this analysis is the tension between Hopkins's religious devotion and his artistic vocation, a struggle reflected in his deeply personal terrible sonnets, which articulate a profound engagement with divine silence and spiritual desolation.
Each chapter addresses a specific theme in Hopkins's poetry, including his radical reinterpretation of natural beauty, his engagement with Catholic theology, his exploration of divine absence, and the complex balance between art and faith. Drawing on primary sources such as his letters, journals, and theological writings, this book also situates Hopkins within the broader context of Catholic mysticism and the Victorian poetic landscape, highlighting his influence on modernist poets like T.
S. Eliot and W. H. Auden. Ultimately, the work reveals Hopkins as a poet whose engagement with the divine is as much about wrestling with the complexities of faith as it is about celebrating the spiritual and aesthetic beauty of the world. His poetry invites readers into an intimate dialogue between the human soul and the divine, where beauty and suffering coexist, and the search for meaning is both a theological and an artistic journey.