crossref-it.info texts.crossref-it.info

Gerard Manley Hopkins' Poetic Career

Hopkins' Welsh inspiration

Hopkins sent his poem to the editor of a Catholic magazine, but it was refused publication. Undeterred, Hopkins began to write a whole stream of poems, mainly nature poems inspired by the beautiful Welsh scenery around St. Asaph. He had learned some Welsh, and found that Welsh poetry, too, influenced his poetic style.

Hopkins - A period of probation

Hopkins’ training as a priest took him to a number of places in the next four years:

  • He undertook brief spells of teaching or parish duties in Chesterfield, Stonyhurst, and London
  • He returned to Oxford, as curate at St. Aloysius’. Here, too, he wrote a number of poems, but he does not seem to have connected with university life in any way, his parish duties absorbing his attention
  • A brief curacy in Leigh outside Manchester (where, from what survives in written form, he preached his best sermons)
  • An appointment as Select Preacher at St. Francis Xavier's, a big Catholic church in Liverpool. The appointment lasted from January 1880 to August 1881
  • A temporary appointment to Glasgow
  • His final retreat, or third part of his novitiate, at Manresa House.

It was only now that he was fully a Jesuit.

Public rejection of Hopkins' work

Hopkins made a few attempts to get poems published, with permission from his superiors, but his poetic style was now so different from Victorian taste that rejection was almost inevitable. Fortunately, he continued to conduct correspondence with:

  • Bridges
  • R.W.Dixon, his old schoolteacher, now a canon in the Church of England, who had published a book of verse
  • the poet and Catholic convert, Coventry Patmore.

It is from this correspondence and from a journal that he had kept from Oxford days till 1875 that we learn of his own poetic and spiritual development.

1. Sometimes used to denote all Christians 2. Used specifically of the Roman Catholic church.
A person whose role is to carry out religious functions.
1. One who has the care / cure of souls. 2. Name for an assistant to the parish priest.
A person within a church appointed to give a sermon at the worship services of that church. He may be the leader of that church, or someone within that church recognised as having a special ability to preach.
In Christianity a period of withdrawal from ordinary life in order to concentrate on prayer.
An order within the Roman Catholic church, founded by St. Ignatius Loyola, and known as the Society of Jesus. They are an active order, serving as priests, missionaries, and teachers.
1. The list of books which the Christian church accepts as inspired by God and authoritative. 2. Priest who is part of a group of clergy attached to a cathedral. 3. A set of rules governing how a church is to be run and what its beliefs are.
The 'Established' or state church of England, the result of a break with the Catholic church under Henry VIII and further developments in the reign of Elizabeth I.
 
Go to Home
Top of Page