Gerard Manley Hopkins: Selected LettersOxford University Press, 1991 - 343 páginas Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844-89) has long been admired as a letterwriter for the vividness, sense of humor, and honesty with which he expressed his opinions. Although he died young, his life overlapped with some of the great poets--Wordsworth, Tennyson, Yeats, Robert Bridges--of the Victorian era, and his comments on them are astute and revealing. This collection, drawn from the three volumes edited by C.C. Abbott, covers the whole period of Hopkins's life, adding some important and lesser-known letters that have only recently come to light. Ranging in date from his school days to his final years in Dublin, the letters include correspondence with his German master at Highgate, a rare letter written during the course of his priestly duties, one to an Irish colleague on the political situation in Ireland, a late letter to his brother Everard on art and poetry, and various other letters to his Oxford friends, to John Henry Newman and Coventry Patmore, and to his family. Together they reveal a man of great warmth who had a wonderful perception of natural beauty, and deep religious ardor. |
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Página 65
... suppose irony , I can only call desperate . I know that living a moral life , with the ordinances of religion and yourself a minister of them , with work to do and the interest of a catholicwards movement to support you , it is most ...
... suppose irony , I can only call desperate . I know that living a moral life , with the ordinances of religion and yourself a minister of them , with work to do and the interest of a catholicwards movement to support you , it is most ...
Página 102
... suppose it is me that you remember at Highgate : I did get a prize for an English poem , ° I do not well remember when ; it may have been while you were there . In those days I knew poor Philip Worsley the poet ; he had been at school ...
... suppose it is me that you remember at Highgate : I did get a prize for an English poem , ° I do not well remember when ; it may have been while you were there . In those days I knew poor Philip Worsley the poet ; he had been at school ...
Página 168
... suppose Crabbe to have been in form a descendant of the school of Pope with a strong and modern realistic eye ; Rogers something between Pope's school and that of Words- worth and Landor ; and Campbell between this last and Byron's ...
... suppose Crabbe to have been in form a descendant of the school of Pope with a strong and modern realistic eye ; Rogers something between Pope's school and that of Words- worth and Landor ; and Campbell between this last and Byron's ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
admire affectionate friend Gerard Alexander William Mowbray anapaests Anglican Balliol beautiful believe Bridges's called Catholic Church copy counterpoint course Coventry Patmore criticism Dear Bridges Dearest Bridges Dublin Edward Bond England English Ernest Hartley Coleridge Eurydice father feel genius Gerard Hopkins Gerard Manley Hopkins GMH's Greek Hampstead Highgate Highgate School hope Hopkins S.J. Hopkins's interest Ireland Irish Kate Hopkins kind letter Manley Hopkins matter mean metre Milton mind never Newman Oxford Parnassian perhaps piece poems poet poetry prose published remember Revd rhymes Richard Watson Dixon Robert Bridges Roehampton seems Sept shew sonnet speak sprung rhythm stanza Stephen's Green Stonyhurst Stonyhurst College style suppose syllables tell things thought Urquhart verse wish words write written wrote