Gerard Manley Hopkins

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Profile Books, 1984 - 59 páginas
Hopkins occupies a position in English literary history which is virtually unique: that of a strikingly original poet whose work remained unknown in his life-time except to a handful of friends, and which was not published until thirty years after his death. He was uninfluenced by the poetic fashions of his own day, nor has he attracted followers since his reputation became established. Mr Storey's essay succeeds that by Geoffrey Grigson, and provides a detailed study of his poetic technique and of his use of language. It examines the terms 'instress' and 'inscape', which are crucial to the understanding of Hopkins's conception of poetry, and discusses the nature and the use of 'sprung rhythm', which first appears in "The Wreck of the Deutschland". It also considers the relation of Hopkins's religious vocation to his poetry. Very few poets have Mr Storey's view, communicated so strongly both excitement at natural beauty and its opposite, intimate knowledge of the terrors of despair. He concludes that Hopkins's poetic innovations were too radical for his work to have received a just valuation from his own contemporaries, and hence that the delay in publication has worked in his favour.

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Contenido

POEMS 18771882
20
POEMS OF DESOLATION 18841885
31
FINAL POEMS
42
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Acerca del autor (1984)

Graham Storey was Reader in English at the University of Cambridge, a Fellow of Trinity Hall and Vice-President of the Hopkins Society. His publications include A Preface to Hopkins and the article on Hopkins in English Poets: Selection Bibliographical Guides. Editions include Journals and Papers of Gerard Manley Hopkins (edited by Humphry House, completed by Graham Storey) and Selected Verse and Prose of Gerard Manley Hopkins.

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