gmhopkins.livejournal.com
Is "The Windhover" about Christ? This question was debated at the…: gmhopkins
http://gmhopkins.livejournal.com/5551.html
Is "The Windhover" about Christ? This question was debated at the Hopkins conference last weekend. Opinions? Post a new comment. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. Post a new comment. Post a new comment. Tis the forged feature finds me. Follow us on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter. 1999 LiveJournal, Inc.
gmhopkins.livejournal.com
Any decent amount of studying Hopkins will lead one to at least some…: gmhopkins
http://gmhopkins.livejournal.com/6360.html
Any decent amount of studying Hopkins will lead one to at least some understanding of what Inscape is (though their seem to be about 3 major schools of thought on the matter which don't exactly correlate, but oh well), but what the dash flab is instress? It doesn't seem like anyone in reality agrees on that! I suppose I have some sort of intimations of it, but the ability to explain it seems just beyond my grasp. Also, for those who care, my JP is on the Wednesday after this one. Pray for Finbar.).
gmhopkins.livejournal.com
The Stained-Glass of Burne-Jones: gmhopkins
http://gmhopkins.livejournal.com/4572.html
The Stained-Glass of Burne-Jones. In the 1930s Michael Roberts opened his enormously influential Faber Book of Modern Verse. David Wright, from the Selected Poems of Thomas Hardy. Post a new comment. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. Post a new comment. Post a new comment. Follow us on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter. 1999 LiveJournal, Inc.
gmhopkins.livejournal.com
Need this quote!: gmhopkins
http://gmhopkins.livejournal.com/7752.html
I have a quote on the tip of my consciousness and I can't quite grasp it! Please let me know asap if this sounds familiar, I really need it, I can't use what I am thinking without appropriately referencing it:. Always happening, always never happened. Somehow this is floating around in my head and I need any clues I can get! Post a new comment. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post.
gmhopkins.livejournal.com
No Worst: gmhopkins
http://gmhopkins.livejournal.com/4043.html
Sometimes it seems we have these odd mental blocks that prevent us from seeing the obvious. No worst, O there is none.". Then I remembered Edgar in King Lear. Act IV, Scene I:. And worse I may be yet; the worst is not. So long as we can say "This is the worst.". Post a new comment. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. Post a new comment. Post a new comment. Follow us on Facebook.
gmhopkins.livejournal.com
Intro and help: gmhopkins
http://gmhopkins.livejournal.com/4879.html
Hi, I have just joined this community and am hoping it to be a good resource in helping me with my knowledge of Hopkins and to plan my lessons. I am 26, a Victorian obsessive, sometimes I think I am. And so my quest for good background critical online sources brings me here. I have a book of all his poetry and prose with a good introduction but need some more detailed sources on specific poems to use in aid of historical context and generally for my own knowledge gap filling as I am new to his poetry...
gmhopkins.livejournal.com
Franciscan in Jesuit robes: gmhopkins
http://gmhopkins.livejournal.com/5976.html
Franciscan in Jesuit robes. So what about Hopkins' Franciscan affinities? Nor can foot feel being shod. Joy fall to thee, father Francis. And the canticle of creatures that is his poetic work. . . Post a new comment. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. We will log you in after post. Post a new comment. Post a new comment. Tis the forged feature finds me. Follow us on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter.
gmhopkins.livejournal.com
Tis the forged feature finds me: gmhopkins
http://gmhopkins.livejournal.com/5882.html
Tis the forged feature finds me. This is not quite a fully formed question, so bear with me. Seamus Heaney, in his essay "The Fire I' The Flint", discusses Hopkins as an example of the Masculine, forging powers of poetry, as opposed to the femanine 'parthenogenic' power of the Romantics (Keats is his primary example). He quotes Hopkins as saying of Keats. He seems to feel that Keats doesn't quite have control of his own poetry, and part of my question is 'should he? Is Heaney just being silly?
gmhopkins.livejournal.com
international Hopkins conference: gmhopkins
http://gmhopkins.livejournal.com/5174.html
Members of this community might like to know that it was featured in a lecture given at this year's international Hopkins conference at Regis University. The paper was entitled "Of Readers and Bloggers: Hopkins on the Web.". You may also be interested to hear that novelist Ron Hansen was, at the time of the conference, ten pages away from finishing his next novel, about Hopkins in Wales and the nuns of the Deutschland. Katherine Phillips charmed us with a lecture on Hopkins and Spring at the Hopkins Banq...
SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT