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POET AND CRITIC

A HOPKINS READER, selected | and with an introduction by John Pick; Cumberlege, Oxford University Press, English price 21/-, ‘O the readér acquainted only with his poetry, this selection should make it clear that Gerard Manley Hopkins was also a highly intelligent and clear-sighted critic. Today the use of speech rhythm in verse is commonly accepted; but such a practice in the 19th Century, when most verse was monotonously regular, showed a critical insight not subjugated by climate of opinion. Much of MHopkins’s correspondence selected in this volume discusses the intricacies of verse structure or musical theory; but when he touches on contemporary prose or poetry, his criticism is often extremely acute. He writes thus to Coventry Patmore: There is an old Adam of barbarism, boyishness, wildness, rawness, rankness, the disreputable, the _unrefined in the refined and educated. It is that that I meant by tykishness (a tyke is a stray, sly, unowned dog), and said you have none of; and I did also think that you were without all sympathy for it and must survey it when you met with it wholly from without. . . I Sonat it was as well to have ever so little ie pied Here Hopkins plants his finger, with great delicacy, upon the main weakness of Patmore’s work. The keynote of Hopkins’s correspondence with Patmore, Bridges and Canon Dixon, is one of passionate accuracy. He _ encourages warmly, listens with patience; but one feels he would rather be boiled alive than create a false impression. The same honesty informs his nature notebooks, where carefully and lovingly he interprets the "inscape" of cloud, rock, waterfall and tree. How far the poet in Hopkins was at war with the Jesuit (continued on next page)

(continued. from previous page) | one cannot say, despite Mr. Pick’s pene- | trating introduction; but these pages re- | veal plainly that for him a natural | order not governed by supernatural order was unthinkable.

James K.

Baxter

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.I whakaputaina aunoatia ēnei kuputuhi tuhinga, e kitea ai pea ētahi hapa i roto. Tirohia te whārangi katoa kia kitea te āhuatanga taketake o te tuhinga.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZLIST19540507.2.26.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealand Listener, Volume 30, Issue 772, 7 May 1954, Page 13

Word count
Tapeke kupu
323

POET AND CRITIC New Zealand Listener, Volume 30, Issue 772, 7 May 1954, Page 13

POET AND CRITIC New Zealand Listener, Volume 30, Issue 772, 7 May 1954, Page 13

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