Gerard Manley Hopkins, selected poems Contents
- As Kingfishers Catch Fire
- Binsey Poplars
- The Blessed Virgin Mary Compared to the Air We Breathe
- Carrion Comfort
- Duns Scotus' Oxford
- God's Grandeur
- Harry Ploughman
- Henry Purcell
- Hurrahing in Harvest
- Inversnaid
- I Wake and Feel the Fell of Dark
- Synopsis of I Wake and Feel the Fell of Dark
- Commentary on I Wake and Feel the Fell of Dark
- Language and tone in I Wake and Feel the Fell of Dark
- Structure and versification in I Wake and Feel the Fell of Dark
- Imagery and symbolism in I Wake and Feel the Fell of Dark
- Themes in I Wake and Feel the Fell of Dark
- The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo
- Synopsis of The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo
- Commentary on The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo
- Language and tone in The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo
- Structure and versification in The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo
- Imagery and symbolism in The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo
- Themes in The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo
- The May Magnificat
- My Own Heart, Let Me Have More Pity On
- Synopsis of My Own Heart, Let Me Have More Pity On
- Commentary on My Own Heart, Let Me Have More Pity On
- Language and tone in My Own Heart, Let Me Have More Pity On
- Structure and versification in My Own Heart, Let Me Have More Pity On
- Imagery and symbolism in My Own Heart, Let Me Have More Pity On
- Themes in My Own Heart, Let Me Have More Pity On
- No Worst, There is None
- Patience, Hard Thing!
- Pied Beauty
- The Sea and the Skylark
- Spelt from Sibyl's Leaves
- Spring
- Spring and Fall
- St. Alphonsus Rodriguez
- The Starlight Night
- That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire and of the Comfort of the Resurrection
- Synopsis of That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire
- Commentary on That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire
- Language and tone in That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire
- Structure and versification in That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire
- Imagery and symbolism in That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire
- Themes in That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire
- Thou Art Indeed Just, Lord
- Tom's Garland
- To Seem the Stranger
- To What Serves Mortal Beauty
- The Windhover
- The Wreck of the Deutschland
- Beauty and its purpose
- The beauty, variety and uniqueness of nature
- Christ's beauty
- Conservation and renewal of nature
- God's sovereignty
- The grace of ordinary life
- Mary as a channel of grace
- Nature as God's book
- Night, the dark night of the soul
- Serving God
- Suffering and faith
- The temptation to despair
- The ugliness of modern life
- Understanding evil in a world God has made
Commentary on Spelt from Sibyl's Leaves
Darkness and death
The poem's central image is that of the darkening evening ushering in the night, which symbolises death, and, therefore, God's judgement. But it also symbolises the ‘dark night of the soul', and the last line of the poem focuses our attention on that, rather than on a statement about judgement.
A prophecy of judgment
A sense of a final judgement is conveyed in the Catholic mass for the dead, the requiem, in a section called the Dies Irae, meaning ‘The Day of Wrath'. It begins, ‘As David and the Sibyl testify...', an interesting combination of biblical and pagan characters. The Sibyl was a prophetess in Greek mythology. This sense of both biblical and pagan ideas of judgement permeates the whole of Hopkins' poem.
More on the Sibyl: Hopkins may be referring to the Sibyl of Cumae, a prophetess of Apollo, the Greek god associated with prophecy and poetry. Messages would appear written on leaves, which would then disintegrate as soon as read by the Sibyl. In the Latin epic The Aeneid by Virgil, the Sibyl conducts the hero, Aeneas, into the Underworld. In the poem, the dead of the Underworld also have prophetic powers, as well as being judged for their earthly lives.
The darkening sky
The octave divides into two parts: the first four lines describe the evening sky, the second four lines the earth, with its colours fading into darkness.
- The sky is seen as huge: ‘vaulty, voluminous' - Hopkins gives us a string of epithets in the first two lines, climaxing in the compounds ‘womb-of-all, home-of-all, hearse-of-all', representing the three stages of human life: birth, life and death.
- Although the stars appear, their light is insufficient to keep earth's ‘dapple', which is ‘at an end'.
- Hopkins' line ‘Glory be to God for dappled things' (Pied Beauty), helps us to understand the joy he felt in the great variation of light and shade in nature. Now all this is being swallowed up by the night
- this becomes a metaphor for his own joy in life being swallowed up, to the extent that as evening becomes night, he cries out: ‘our night whelms, whelms, and will end us.'
The doom of division
The sestet expresses the thought that, for all nature's variety, in the end judgement is only expressed in two terms. In biblical thought, there is the main Heaven / Hell terminology for this, but Hopkins refrains from using this, instead referring to the ‘two flocks, two folds' image of the sheep and the goats, as in:
He uses other images of twos as well. Such reductionism he finds devastating, and, in the last line, the depth of his own despair at this is suddenly revealed in ‘thoughts against thoughts in groans grind.' There is, in other words, no resolution in the sestet at all, only a worsening of his mental anguish.
- List the words that create the scale of the evening sky.
- Collect the images which suggest the reduction to twos
- There is a dialogue going on.
- Who with?
- English Standard Version
- King James Version
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