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Gerald Manley Hopkins: A True Conservative

Autor:   •  March 8, 2011  •  Essay  •  1,743 Words (7 Pages)  •  2,150 Views

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Gerard Manley Hopkins: A True Conservative

Gerard Manley Hopkins was born in Stratford, England on July 28, 1842 to Manley and

Catherine Hopkins. He was the first of nine siblings. His mother and father were High Church

Anglicans, very moderate people, and his father was also a marine insurance adjuster who had

published a volume of poetry the year before Gerard was born. As a young boy, he showed an

attraction to poetry and he received many awards throughout his school career. His life had a

great contribution to his writings. He converted to Roman Catholic by the age of twenty-two and

was alienated from his family for doing so. This transition in his life influenced him to burn all

of his previous poems because he felt as though his works were not appropriate collections for a

religious man such as himself. Hopkins attended Highgate, a grammar school from the years

1854 until 1863. He won a poetry prize and for "The Escorial" and that landed him a scholarship

to Balliol College, Oxford until1867. After winning First-Class degrees and known as the star of

Balliol, he entered the Society of Jesus the following year. The fact that Hopkins attended

Oxford was a major role in his decision to convert to Christianity. Oxford based its studies and

its environment was focused around Catholicism. Becoming a follower of Christ was

the motivation behind him burning his works; because he felt the previous works were to impure

for a person of strong Christian faith. (The Victorian Web: An Overview.) In 1874, hestudied theology in North Wales, he there learned Welsh and later adapted to the rhythms of

Welsh poetry to his own verse. He invented what he called "sprung rhythm". Sprung rhythm was

designed to imitate the rhythm of natural speech. He was ordained as a priest three years late

until 1879. He found this work terribly exhausting and then two years later he began a spiritual

study in London and for three years taught Latin and Greek at Stonyhurst College. He became

Professor of Greek and Latin at University College Dublin. It is thought that this would be his

happiest time, but instead Hopkins was found in extended depression.

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