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.......Hopkins completed "Pied Beauty" in 1877. The London firm of Humphrey S. Milford published
it in 1918 in Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins.
Theme
.......The theme of the poem is this: Nature in its variety--including streaked, spotted, and
multicolored skies, fields, nuts, fish, birds, and other animals--is a gift of God for which we all
should be thankful. One may interpret this theme to include human beings, with their many
personalities, moods, idiosyncrasies, occupations, cultures, languages, political systems, skin colors
and other physical attributes, and so on.
.......The meter of "Pied Beauty" is sprung rhythm, a term coined by Hopkins to describe a metric
format that permits an unlimited number of unstressed syllables in each line to accompany
stressed syllables. A metric foot in sprung rhythm usually contains one to four syllables. Hopkins
intended sprung rhythm to mimic the stresses occurring in ordinary English speech.
Structure
.......Hopkins begins and ends the poem with a call to praise God for the gifts He has given us.
Between these calls, he presents two short lists and a comment about the beauty of God. The first
list uses concrete and specific language (skies, the cow, trout, chestnuts, finches, and farm fields);
the second list, abstract and general language (things counter, original, spare, strange, fickle, etc.).
The comment notes that the beauty of God, unlike the beauty of creation, does not change. Thus,
Hopkins structures the poem as follows:
Rhyme
Line 11: C
Tone
.......Glory to God, the speaker says, for giving the world spotted, streaked, and multicolored
things. Blue skies, for example, may display streaks of white or gray--or the colors of the sunset. In
this respect, skies are like cows, which may be brown with streaks or patches of another color.
And then there are the speckled trout and the fallen chestnuts with open hulls that reveal kernels
with an intense color resembling the glow of burning coal. Consider also, the speaker says, the
multicolored wings of the finches and the farmland with patches of green contrasting with plowed
or fallow patches of brown. And what of the variety of tools and kits and equipment that dapple
the workplace of men?
.......There are many varieties of odd and strange things in the world--some of them original, one
of a kind. The qualities of these fickle things may be freckled with opposites. Swiftness may be
freckled with slowness, sweetness with sourness, brightness with dimness.
.......But He who brings forth dappled things is not Himself dappled. He is changeless, ever the
same.
.......Praise him.
..
Pied Beauty
Praise him.
Notes
3...brinded: Brindled; having a brownish yellow or gray coat with spots or streaks of a darker color.
6...Fresh . . . falls: Fallen chestnuts with shells that opened. The exposed nuts resemble glowing
coals.
7...trim: equipment.
Figures of Speech
Alliteration
Anaphora
Metaphor
Paradox
Simile
.......The opening words of the poem paraphrase in English the Latin motto of the Jesuits: Ad
majorem Dei gloriam (To the greater glory of God). Hopkins was a member of the Jesuits, an order
of Roman Catholic priests with the official name of the Society of Jesus. The order was founded by
the Spanish theologian Saint Ignatius of Loyola (1491-1556). His Spanish name was San Ignacio de
Loyola.
2. Hopkins writes in line 9 about things with opposite qualities. What opposite qualities do you
have?
3. Identify examples of neologisms in the poem. If you do not know what a neologism is, first look
up the word in a dictionary, then answer the question.
4. Another poem about the beauty of nature is "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud," by William
Wordsworth. Write an essay comparing and contrasting these poems.