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
God's sovereignty in The Wreck of the Deutschland
God's active rule
Hopkins' theodicy is necessarily bound up with his ideas on God's sovereignty. However, he is never fatalistic, in the sense of ‘It was God's will – end of discussion'. He spends most of the first part of the poem giving us his own experience of God's ‘mastery'. In fact, this is how the poem begins; ‘Thou mastering me/God!'
God's sovereignty, then, is an active mastery.
Humans are fallen, and, therefore, naturally rebellious against God (stanza 9). Rebellion can be an active flouting of God's will and law; it can just as easily mean totally ignoring them. But God fights back, as Hopkins discovered.
Hopkins, as many other people, finds initial dread and fear in the divine approach as stanzas 1-3 show. Yet having submitted to God, he finds his mercy in ‘the gospel proffer' (stanza 4), and comes to find the meaning he is looking for in Christ's own fight and suffering against evil.
Good from evil
Working out from his own experience, Hopkins applies God's mastery to the shipwreck. It is not that God willed the storm (stanza 6), but that he wills to use the circumstance for good, in this case:
- the revelation of himself to the nun
- the triumphal death of all the nuns, when everyone else was panicking.
Death comes anyway (stanza 11); it is the manner of dying that matters, he believes.
This might not seem much of a triumph; but, to Hopkins, God had got the attention of those on board and the country as a whole, and this could be the beginning of a new mastery over the people of England. What had once been a Catholic country might now be reclaimed, and the nuns' martyrdom might be the beginning of that process.
Sovereign language
Hopkins' language is full of terms of power:
- ‘mastering', ‘master', ‘mastery', ‘King', ‘Head', ‘lord it', ‘triumph' are just some of the terms used.
But there are also:
- terms of submission
- terms of fear and dread, as humans come into contact with the divine (see Language and tone).
However God's sovereignty is merciful for Hopkins, so words of mercy outnumber these others.
The poem ends where it began, with a full declaration of Christ's lordship.
- What different styles of exercising power can you think of?
- Which might be applied to a supreme being?
- Which does Hopkins use of God?
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