000 01525cam a2200169ua 4500
020 _a9788126912872
082 _a821
_bBRO/G
100 0 _aBrown, Daniel
245 1 0 _aGerard Manley Hopkins
260 _aNew Delhi
_bAtlantic
_c2004
300 _a123p.
490 0 _aWriters and Their Work
520 _aThis book introduces Hopkins' poetry and prose through its wide-ranging engagements with nature, language, science, philosophy, theology, prosody and social issues. Gerard Manley Hopkins did not write his poetry for his fellow Victorians nor indeed for the huge readership it has acquired since it was first published in 1918, almost forty years after his death. The present study argues that Hopkins' fascinatingly original poetry is the most complete expression of his life's work and that it becomes accessible when it is read with his prose writings as a passionate exploration of nature, language, philosophy, contemporary science, theology, and prosody, all of which are also drawn together in his central ideas of inscape and Sprung Rhythm. These contexts yield compelling new readings of the full range of his work, including his early poetry and his neglected poetic fragments, as well as those poems, such as 'The Windhover', by which he is best known. A final chapter steps back from the intensely private contexts in which the poetry was produced to examine its interactions with social issues of class and gender.
650 _aEnglish literature- Poetry
650 0 _aBiography-poet
942 _cBK
999 _c29665
_d29665