skip to content
Hopkins in Ireland
ClosePreview this item

Hopkins in Ireland

Author: Norman White
Publisher: Dublin : University College Dublin Press, 2002.
Edition/Format:   Book : Biography : EnglishView all editions and formats
Summary:
"Gerard Manley Hopkins spent five unhappy years in Ireland before his death in 1889, during which time he wrote perhaps the most interesting group of all his poems. Although he is one of the most well known and liked of poets, he is still one of the least understood. This is the first full-length study of Hopkin's time in Ireland, when he was Professor of Classics at University College Dublin, and it is both a  Read more...
Rating:

(not yet rated) 0 with reviews - Be the first.

 

Find a copy in the library

&AllPage.SpinnerRetrieving; Finding libraries that hold this item...

Details

Genre/Form: Biography
Additional Physical Format: Online version:
White, Norman, 1937-
Hopkins in Ireland.
Dublin : University College Dublin Press, 2002
(OCoLC)606825032
Named Person: Gerard Manley Hopkins; Gerard Manley Hopkins; Gerard Manley Hopkins; Gerard Manley Hopkins
Material Type: Biography
Document Type: Book
All Authors / Contributors: Norman White
ISBN: 1900621711 9781900621717 190062172X 9781900621724
OCLC Number: 49834512
Description: xviii, 217 p., [8] p. of plates : ill. ; 24 cm.
Contents: Hopkins in England, Wales and Scotland; England and Ireland; Spelt from Sibyl's Leaves; To Seem the Stranger; No Worst; Worse; Now Done Darkness; Mortal Beauty; The Portrait' The Epithalamian; Tom, Dick and Harry; Soldiering; That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire; Retreat at Rahan, New Year 1889; Swan Song.
Responsibility: Norman White.

Abstract:

Gerard Manley Hopkins spent five unhappy years in Ireland before his death in 1889, during which time he wrote perhaps the most interesting group of all his poems. Working outwards from Hopkins's  Read more...

Reviews

Editorial reviews

Publisher Synopsis

"[White] treats each poem in great detail, placing each in the context of the poet's experiences of Ireland at a particular moment in his life and examining the way in which the poem is a reflection Read more...

 
User-contributed reviews
Retrieving GoodReads reviews...

Tags

Be the first.
Confirm this request

You may have already requested this item. Please select Ok if you would like to proceed with this request anyway.

Linked Data


<http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49834512>
library:oclcnum"49834512"
library:placeOfPublication
library:placeOfPublication
owl:sameAs<info:oclcnum/49834512>
rdf:typeschema:Book
rdfs:seeAlso
rdfs:seeAlso
rdfs:seeAlso
rdfs:seeAlso
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
rdf:typeschema:Person
schema:name"Hopkins, Gerard Manley, 1844-1889"
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
rdf:typeschema:Organization
schema:name"University College, Dublin"
schema:author
schema:datePublished"2002"
schema:genre"Criticism, interpretation, etc."
schema:genre"Biography"
schema:genre"History"
schema:inLanguage"en"
schema:name"Hopkins in Ireland"
schema:numberOfPages"217"
schema:publisher
rdf:typeschema:Organization
schema:name"University College Dublin Press"
schema:reviews
rdf:typeschema:Review
schema:itemReviewed<http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49834512>
schema:reviewBody""Gerard Manley Hopkins spent five unhappy years in Ireland before his death in 1889, during which time he wrote perhaps the most interesting group of all his poems. Although he is one of the most well known and liked of poets, he is still one of the least understood. This is the first full-length study of Hopkin's time in Ireland, when he was Professor of Classics at University College Dublin, and it is both a biography and a critical account of the poetry." "Norman White uses his unrivalled knowledge of Hopkins's work to examine the poet's personality and shows him as a sick and self-lacerating human being. This is not a conventional biography and it does not aim to be an account of Hopkins's doings in Ireland; the important things that happened to Hopkins in Ireland were mental, and so the book is an exploration of the poems written in Ireland largely as a form of psychological biography, working outwards from Hopkins's most intimate creations. This book greatly adds to our understanding of the personality and work of Hopkins."--BOOK JACKET."
Close Window

Please sign in to WorldCat 

Don't have an account? You can easily create a free account.