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The poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins.

By: Contributor(s): Series: Galaxy bookPublication details: Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1970.Edition: 4th ed. / based on the 1st ed. of 1918 and enl. to incorporate all known poems and fragmentsDescription: lxix, 362 pages ; 20 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0192810944
  • 9780192810946
  • 0192112619
  • 9780192112613
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 821/.8 18
LOC classification:
  • PR4803.H44A17
Other classification:
  • HL 3121
Contents:
Early poems 1860-75?: The escorial -- A vision of the mermaids -- Winter with the Gulf Stream -- Spring and death -- A soliloquy of one of the spies left in the wilderness -- Barnfloor and winepress -- New readings -- He hath abolished the old drouth -- Heaven-haven -- For a picture of St. Dorothea -- Easter communion -- Two sonnets: To Oxford -- Where are thou friend, whom I shall never see -- Three sonnets: The beginning of the end -- The alchemist in the city -- Myself unholy, from myself unholy -- See how spring opens with disabling cold -- My prayers must meet a brazen heaven -- Let me be to thee as a circling bird -- The half-way house -- The nightingale -- The habit of perfection -- Nondum -- Easter -- Lines for a picture of St. Dorothea -- Ad Mariam -- Rosa Mystica -- Poems 1876-89: Dedication of the first edition -- Sonnet to G.M.H. / Rebert Bridges -- Author's preface with explanatory notes and wxamples by W.H.G. -- The wreck of the Deutschland -- The silver jubilee -- Penmaen pool -- God's grandeur -- The starlight night -- Spring -- In the valley of the Elwy -- The sea and the skylark -- The windhover -- Pied beauty -- Hurrahing in harvest -- The caged skylark -- The lantern out of doors -- The loss of the Eurydice -- The May magnificat -- Binsey poplars -- Duns Scotus's Oxford -- Henry Purcell -- The candle indoors -- The handsome heart -- The bugler's first communion -- Morning, midday, and evening sacrifice -- Andromeda -- Peace -- At the wedding march -- Felix Randal -- Brothers -- Spring and fall -- Inversnaid -- As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame -- Ribblesdale -- The leaden echo and the golden echo -- The Blessed Virgin compared to the air we breathe -- Spelt from Sibyl's leaves -- Top what serves mortal beauty? -- The soldier -- Carrion comfort -- No worst, there is none. Pitched past pitch of grief -- To seem the stranger lies my lot, my life -- I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day -- Patience, hard thing! the hard thing but to pray.
My own heart let me more have pity on; let -- Tom Garland -- Harry Ploughman -- That nature is a Heraclitean fire and of the comfort of the resurrection -- In honour of St. Alphonsus Rodriguez -- Thou art indeed just, Lord if I contend -- The shepherd's brow, fronting forked lightning, owns -- To R.B. -- Unfinished poems, fragments, light verse, etc. 1862-89: Il mystico -- A windy day in summer -- A fragment of anything you like -- Fragments of Pilate -- A voice from the world -- She schools the flighty pupils of her eyes -- The lover's stars -- During the eastering of untainted morns -- -- Hill, heaven, and every field, are still -- The peacock's eye -- Love preparing to fly -- I must hunt down the prize -- Why should their foolish bands, their hopeless hearses -- Why if it be so, for the dismal morn -- It was a hard thing to undo this knot -- Glimmer'd along the square-cut steep -- Late I fell in the ecstacy -- Miss story's character! too much you ask -- Did Helen steal my love from me? -- Seven epigrams: Of virtues I most warmly bless, Modern poets, On a poetess, You ask why can't Clarissa hold her tongue, On one who borrowed his sermons, By one of the old school who was bid to follow Mr. Browning's flights, Boughs being pruned, birds preened, show more fair -- By Mrs. Hopley -- Sundry fragments and images -- Io -- The rainbow -- A.__yes for a time they held as well -- Fragments of floris in Italy -- __I am like a slip of comet -- No, they are come; their horn is lifted up -- Now I am minded to take pipe in hand -- The cold whip-adder unespied -- Fragments of Richard -- All as the moth call'd underwing alighted -- The queen's crowning -- Tomorrow meet you? O not tomorrow -- Fragment of Stephen and Barberie -- I hear a noise of waters drawn away -- When eyes that cast about in heights of heaven -- The summer malison -- O death, death, he is come -- Bellisle! that is a fabling name, but we -- Confirmed beauty will not bear a stress -- But what indeed is ask'd of me? -- To Oxford.
Continuation of R. Garnett's nix -- A noise of falls I am possessed by -- O what a silence is this wilderness! -- Mothers are doubtless happier for their babes -- Daphne -- Fragments of Castara Victrix -- Shakspeare -- Trees by their yield -- A complaint -- Moonless darkness stands between -- The earth and heaven, so little known -- As it fell upon a day -- In the staring darkness -- Summa -- Not kind! to freeze me with forecast -- The elopement -- St. Thecla -- 1876-89: Moonrise June 19, 1876 -- The woodlark -- On St. Winefred -- To him who ever thought with love of me -- What being in rank-old nature should earlier have that breath been -- Cheery beggar -- Denis, whose motionable, alert, most vaulting wit -- The furl of fresh-leaved dogrose down -- Margaret Clitheroe -- Repeat that, repeat -- The child is father to the man -- On a piece of music -- Ashboughs -- The times are nightfall, look, their light grows less -- Hope hold to Christ the mind's own mirror out -- ST Winefred's well -- To his watch -- Strike, churl; hurl, cheerless wind, then; heltering hail -- What shall I do for the land that bred me -- On the portrait of two beautiful young people -- The sea took pity; it interposed with doom -- Epithalamion -- Translations, Latin and Welsh poems, etc. 1862-87: Aeschylus: Prometheus Desmotes -- From the Greek: love me as I love thee, o double sweet! -- Inundatio Oxoniana -- Elegiacs: Tristu tu, memimi, virgo -- Elegiacs: after The convent threshold -- Horace: persicos odi, puer, apparatus -- Horace: odi profanum volgus et arceo -- Jesu Dulcis memoria -- S. Thomae Aquinatis rhythmus -- Oratio patris condren -- O deus, ego amo te -- The same (Welsh version) -- Cywydd -- Ad episcopum salopiensem -- Ad reverendum patrem fratem Thomam Burke O.P. In S. Winefriedam -- Haec te jubent salver, quod possunt, loca -- Miror surgentem per puram oriona noctem -- Ad matrem virginem -- May lines -- In theclam virginem -- Latin version of Dryden's Epigram on Milton -- Songs from Shakespeare.
In Latin and Greek: Come unto these yellow sands, Full fathom five thy father lies -- While you here do snoring lie -- Tell me where is fancy bred -- The same (Greek version) -- Orpheus with his lute made trees -- The same (Greek version) -- Unfinished Latin verson of When icicles hang by the wall -- Incomplete Latin version of "In all things beautiful, I cannot see / Robert Bridges.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Academic Resource Center at Levitt General Stacks (LOWER Level) PR 4803 .H44 A17 1970 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 27566

Includes indexes.

Includes bibliographical references and indexes.

Early poems 1860-75?: The escorial -- A vision of the mermaids -- Winter with the Gulf Stream -- Spring and death -- A soliloquy of one of the spies left in the wilderness -- Barnfloor and winepress -- New readings -- He hath abolished the old drouth -- Heaven-haven -- For a picture of St. Dorothea -- Easter communion -- Two sonnets: To Oxford -- Where are thou friend, whom I shall never see -- Three sonnets: The beginning of the end -- The alchemist in the city -- Myself unholy, from myself unholy -- See how spring opens with disabling cold -- My prayers must meet a brazen heaven -- Let me be to thee as a circling bird -- The half-way house -- The nightingale -- The habit of perfection -- Nondum -- Easter -- Lines for a picture of St. Dorothea -- Ad Mariam -- Rosa Mystica -- Poems 1876-89: Dedication of the first edition -- Sonnet to G.M.H. / Rebert Bridges -- Author's preface with explanatory notes and wxamples by W.H.G. -- The wreck of the Deutschland -- The silver jubilee -- Penmaen pool -- God's grandeur -- The starlight night -- Spring -- In the valley of the Elwy -- The sea and the skylark -- The windhover -- Pied beauty -- Hurrahing in harvest -- The caged skylark -- The lantern out of doors -- The loss of the Eurydice -- The May magnificat -- Binsey poplars -- Duns Scotus's Oxford -- Henry Purcell -- The candle indoors -- The handsome heart -- The bugler's first communion -- Morning, midday, and evening sacrifice -- Andromeda -- Peace -- At the wedding march -- Felix Randal -- Brothers -- Spring and fall -- Inversnaid -- As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame -- Ribblesdale -- The leaden echo and the golden echo -- The Blessed Virgin compared to the air we breathe -- Spelt from Sibyl's leaves -- Top what serves mortal beauty? -- The soldier -- Carrion comfort -- No worst, there is none. Pitched past pitch of grief -- To seem the stranger lies my lot, my life -- I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day -- Patience, hard thing! the hard thing but to pray.

My own heart let me more have pity on; let -- Tom Garland -- Harry Ploughman -- That nature is a Heraclitean fire and of the comfort of the resurrection -- In honour of St. Alphonsus Rodriguez -- Thou art indeed just, Lord if I contend -- The shepherd's brow, fronting forked lightning, owns -- To R.B. -- Unfinished poems, fragments, light verse, etc. 1862-89: Il mystico -- A windy day in summer -- A fragment of anything you like -- Fragments of Pilate -- A voice from the world -- She schools the flighty pupils of her eyes -- The lover's stars -- During the eastering of untainted morns -- -- Hill, heaven, and every field, are still -- The peacock's eye -- Love preparing to fly -- I must hunt down the prize -- Why should their foolish bands, their hopeless hearses -- Why if it be so, for the dismal morn -- It was a hard thing to undo this knot -- Glimmer'd along the square-cut steep -- Late I fell in the ecstacy -- Miss story's character! too much you ask -- Did Helen steal my love from me? -- Seven epigrams: Of virtues I most warmly bless, Modern poets, On a poetess, You ask why can't Clarissa hold her tongue, On one who borrowed his sermons, By one of the old school who was bid to follow Mr. Browning's flights, Boughs being pruned, birds preened, show more fair -- By Mrs. Hopley -- Sundry fragments and images -- Io -- The rainbow -- A.__yes for a time they held as well -- Fragments of floris in Italy -- __I am like a slip of comet -- No, they are come; their horn is lifted up -- Now I am minded to take pipe in hand -- The cold whip-adder unespied -- Fragments of Richard -- All as the moth call'd underwing alighted -- The queen's crowning -- Tomorrow meet you? O not tomorrow -- Fragment of Stephen and Barberie -- I hear a noise of waters drawn away -- When eyes that cast about in heights of heaven -- The summer malison -- O death, death, he is come -- Bellisle! that is a fabling name, but we -- Confirmed beauty will not bear a stress -- But what indeed is ask'd of me? -- To Oxford.

Continuation of R. Garnett's nix -- A noise of falls I am possessed by -- O what a silence is this wilderness! -- Mothers are doubtless happier for their babes -- Daphne -- Fragments of Castara Victrix -- Shakspeare -- Trees by their yield -- A complaint -- Moonless darkness stands between -- The earth and heaven, so little known -- As it fell upon a day -- In the staring darkness -- Summa -- Not kind! to freeze me with forecast -- The elopement -- St. Thecla -- 1876-89: Moonrise June 19, 1876 -- The woodlark -- On St. Winefred -- To him who ever thought with love of me -- What being in rank-old nature should earlier have that breath been -- Cheery beggar -- Denis, whose motionable, alert, most vaulting wit -- The furl of fresh-leaved dogrose down -- Margaret Clitheroe -- Repeat that, repeat -- The child is father to the man -- On a piece of music -- Ashboughs -- The times are nightfall, look, their light grows less -- Hope hold to Christ the mind's own mirror out -- ST Winefred's well -- To his watch -- Strike, churl; hurl, cheerless wind, then; heltering hail -- What shall I do for the land that bred me -- On the portrait of two beautiful young people -- The sea took pity; it interposed with doom -- Epithalamion -- Translations, Latin and Welsh poems, etc. 1862-87: Aeschylus: Prometheus Desmotes -- From the Greek: love me as I love thee, o double sweet! -- Inundatio Oxoniana -- Elegiacs: Tristu tu, memimi, virgo -- Elegiacs: after The convent threshold -- Horace: persicos odi, puer, apparatus -- Horace: odi profanum volgus et arceo -- Jesu Dulcis memoria -- S. Thomae Aquinatis rhythmus -- Oratio patris condren -- O deus, ego amo te -- The same (Welsh version) -- Cywydd -- Ad episcopum salopiensem -- Ad reverendum patrem fratem Thomam Burke O.P. In S. Winefriedam -- Haec te jubent salver, quod possunt, loca -- Miror surgentem per puram oriona noctem -- Ad matrem virginem -- May lines -- In theclam virginem -- Latin version of Dryden's Epigram on Milton -- Songs from Shakespeare.

In Latin and Greek: Come unto these yellow sands, Full fathom five thy father lies -- While you here do snoring lie -- Tell me where is fancy bred -- The same (Greek version) -- Orpheus with his lute made trees -- The same (Greek version) -- Unfinished Latin verson of When icicles hang by the wall -- Incomplete Latin version of "In all things beautiful, I cannot see / Robert Bridges.

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