Gerard Manley Hopkins

Gerard Manley Hopkins
Gerard Manley Hopkins
    Gerard Manley Hopkins
     Catholic_Encyclopedia Gerard Manley Hopkins
    Jesuit and poet, born at Stratford, near London, 28 July, 1844; died at Dublin, 8 June, 1889.
    His early education was received at Cholmondeley School, Highgate, where he gave evidence of fine intellectual endowments, scholarly tastes, and poetical gifts above the ordinary. The numerous conversions from Anglicanism to the Catholic Church in the middle of the nineteenth century together with the spirit of the Oxford Movement were not without their effect on the young student, and in October, 1866, he was received into the Church. In the following year he entered Balliol College, Oxford, having been prepared for his classical course by Walter Pater. Very soon his religious vocation manifested itself and he left the university, going to the Birmingham Oratory, where he spent a short time with Father Newman. In 1868 he entered the Society of Jesus. After ordination he was sent to Liverpool where his work lay among the poor of the slums of that city. His next post was that of preacher in London, after which he was stationed at St. Aloysius' Church, Oxford, where the Baron and Baroness de Paravicini have erected a memorial to him. In 1884 he was elected fellow of of the Royal University of Ireland and appointed classical examiner at Dublin, where he died of a contagious fever.
    While still at school he had written verses of distinctive merit but in his ardour as a novice he destroyed his poems, a single fragment surviving, and he wrote no more for nearly ten years. The poetry which he subsequently wrote at various periods until the year of his death is of a very high quality. It resembles the poetry of Crashaw in its exuberance of language, its lyric qualities, and its daring metaphors. The poems have never been collected, but many of them have been published in various anthologies such as Beeching's "Lyra Sacra" and Miles' "Poets and Poetry of the Century".
    BRÉGY, The Poets' Chantry (London, 1912), 70-88. [Note: Hopkins' collected poems were published first by Robert Bridges in 1918, and in an enlarged second edition in 1930. Volumes of his correspondence appeared in 1935 and 1938, his Notebooks and Papers in 1937.]
    BLANCHE M. KELLY
    Transcribed by Herman F. Holbrook "He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change: Praise him."

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company. . 1910.


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  • Gerard Manley Hopkins — Born 28 July 1844(1844 07 28) Died 8 June 1889(1889 06 08) (aged 44) Dublin …   Wikipedia

  • Gerard Manley Hopkins — Gerard Manley Hopkins. Gerard Manley Hopkins (* 28. Juli 1844 in Stratford bei London; † 8. Juni 1889 in Dublin) war ein britischer Lyriker und Jesuit, dessen Gedichte vor allem wegen der Lebendigkeit ihres Ausdrucks bewundert werden …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Gerard Manley Hopkins — Gerard Manley Hopkins, né le 28 juillet 1844 à Stratford, Essex (Royaume Uni) et décédé le 8 juin 1889 à Dublin (Irlande), était un prêtre …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Gerard Manley Hopkins — Gerard Manley Hopkins …   Wikipedia Español

  • Gerard Manley Hopkins — noun English poet (1844 1889) • Syn: ↑Hopkins • Instance Hypernyms: ↑poet * * * Gerard Manley Hopkins [Gerard Manley Hopkins] (1844–89 …   Useful english dictionary

  • Gerard Manley Hopkins — ➡ Hopkins (II) * * * …   Universalium

  • Hopkins, Gerard Manley — born July 28, 1844, Stratford, Essex, Eng. died June 8, 1889, Dublin, Ire. British poet. After studies at Oxford, he converted to Roman Catholicism and eventually became a Jesuit priest. He burned his youthful verses as inappropriate to his… …   Universalium

  • Hopkins, Gerard Manley — (1844–89)    Poet.    Hopkins was born in Stratford, Essex, and he was educated at the University of Oxford. At the age of twentytwo he was received into the Roman Catholic Church and joined the Jesuit Order. He gave up writing poetry when he… …   Who’s Who in Christianity

  • Hopkins, Gerard Manley — (1844 1889)    Born into a prosperous family in Stratford, Essex, he was brought up in Hampstead. At school he won the headmaster s poetry prize with his poem The Escorial in (1860). In 1866, while at Balliol College, Oxford, he converted to the… …   British and Irish poets

  • Hopkins, Gerard Manley — • Jesuit and poet (1844 1889) Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006 …   Catholic encyclopedia

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