The poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: London, New York [etc.] Oxford U.P., 1967.Edition: 4th ed. based on the 1st ed. of 1918 and enlarged to incorporate all known poems and fragments; edited with additional notes, a foreword on the revised text, and a new biographical and critical introduction by W. H. Gardner and N. H. MacKenzieDescription: lxvi, 362 p. 22 cmSubject(s): LOC classification:
  • PR4803.H44 A17 1967
Contents:
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 -- To Oxford -- Where are thou friend, whom I shall never see -- 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 the 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 -- Dedication of the first edition (Poems 1876-89) -- Sonnet to G.M.H. / Robert Bridges -- Author's preface (with explanatory notes and examples by W.H.G. -- The wreck of 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 hansome 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 -- To what serves mortal beauty -- The soldier -- Carrion comfort -- No worst, there is none -- 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 -- Tom's Garland -- Harry Ploughman -- That nature is a Heraclitean fire ... -- In honour of St. Alphonsus Rodriguez -- Thou art indeed just, Lord, if I contend -- The shepherd's brow, fronting forked lightning -- To R.B. -- 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 -- 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 -- Boughs being pruned, birds preened -- By Mrs. Hopley. Sundry fragments and images -- Io -- The rainbow -- 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 -- Shakspere -- 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 -- Moonrise -- The woodlark -- On St. Winefred -- To him who ever thougth with love of me -- What being in rank-old nature should earlier have that breath been -- Cheery beggar -- Denis, who 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 holds to Christ the mind's own mirror out -- St. Winefred's well -- To his watch -- Strike, churl; hurl cheerless wind -- Thee, God, I come from, to thee go -- 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 -- Prometheus desmotes / translated from Aeschylus -- Love me as I love thee. O double sweet / translated from the Greek -- Inundiatio Oxoniana / translated from the Greek -- Tristu tu, memini, virgo / translated from Elegiacs -- After the Convent Threshold / translated from Elegiacs -- Persicos odi, puer, apparatus / translated from Horace -- Odi profanum volgus et arceo / translated from Horace -- Jesu Dulcis Memoria / translated from the Latin -- S. Thomae Aquinatis Rhythmus / translated from St. Thomas Aquainus -- Oratio Patris Condren -- O Deus, ego amo te / translated from the Latin -- O Deus, ego amo te / translated from the Welsh -- Cywydd / translated from the Welsh -- Ad episcopum salopiensem / translated from the Latin -- Ad reverendum patrem fratrem / translated from Thomam Burke -- In S. Winefridam / translated -- Haec te jubent salvere, quod possunt, loca / translated -- Miror surgentem per puram Oriona noctem / translated -- Ad matrem virginem / translated -- May lines -- In Theclam Virginem / translated -- Epigram on Milton / translated from the Latin of Dryden -- Come unto these yellow sands / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- Full fathom five thy father lies / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- While you here do snoring lie / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- Tell me where is Fancy bred / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- Orpheus with his lute made trees / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- When icicles hang by the wall / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- Incomplete Latin version of 'When icicles hang by the wall'
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books (30-Day Checkout) Books (30-Day Checkout) Nash Library General Stacks PR4803.H44A17 1948 1 Available 33710000489968

WAR, NEWBERY,

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 -- To Oxford -- Where are thou friend, whom I shall never see -- 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 the 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 -- Dedication of the first edition (Poems 1876-89) -- Sonnet to G.M.H. / Robert Bridges -- Author's preface (with explanatory notes and examples by W.H.G. -- The wreck of 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 hansome 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 -- To what serves mortal beauty -- The soldier -- Carrion comfort -- No worst, there is none -- 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 -- Tom's Garland -- Harry Ploughman -- That nature is a Heraclitean fire ... -- In honour of St. Alphonsus Rodriguez -- Thou art indeed just, Lord, if I contend -- The shepherd's brow, fronting forked lightning -- To R.B. -- 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 -- 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 -- Boughs being pruned, birds preened -- By Mrs. Hopley. Sundry fragments and images -- Io -- The rainbow -- 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 -- Shakspere -- 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 -- Moonrise -- The woodlark -- On St. Winefred -- To him who ever thougth with love of me -- What being in rank-old nature should earlier have that breath been -- Cheery beggar -- Denis, who 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 holds to Christ the mind's own mirror out -- St. Winefred's well -- To his watch -- Strike, churl; hurl cheerless wind -- Thee, God, I come from, to thee go -- 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 -- Prometheus desmotes / translated from Aeschylus -- Love me as I love thee. O double sweet / translated from the Greek -- Inundiatio Oxoniana / translated from the Greek -- Tristu tu, memini, virgo / translated from Elegiacs -- After the Convent Threshold / translated from Elegiacs -- Persicos odi, puer, apparatus / translated from Horace -- Odi profanum volgus et arceo / translated from Horace -- Jesu Dulcis Memoria / translated from the Latin -- S. Thomae Aquinatis Rhythmus / translated from St. Thomas Aquainus -- Oratio Patris Condren -- O Deus, ego amo te / translated from the Latin -- O Deus, ego amo te / translated from the Welsh -- Cywydd / translated from the Welsh -- Ad episcopum salopiensem / translated from the Latin -- Ad reverendum patrem fratrem / translated from Thomam Burke -- In S. Winefridam / translated -- Haec te jubent salvere, quod possunt, loca / translated -- Miror surgentem per puram Oriona noctem / translated -- Ad matrem virginem / translated -- May lines -- In Theclam Virginem / translated -- Epigram on Milton / translated from the Latin of Dryden -- Come unto these yellow sands / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- Full fathom five thy father lies / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- While you here do snoring lie / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- Tell me where is Fancy bred / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- Orpheus with his lute made trees / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- When icicles hang by the wall / translated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- Incomplete Latin version of 'When icicles hang by the wall'