French poet, Julien Green  and Victorian Poet, Gerard Manley Hopkins
    
  Michael O'Dwyer,
 French Dept,
 National University of Ireland,
 Maynooth.   
    
    ' . . my main contention in this paper is that Green's reading of Hopkins is, in fact, a reading of himself and of his own preoccupations as a person and as a writer. What Green reads or rather highlights and singles out for comment  can be seen to be a mirror of his own deepest concerns.' 
    French novelist, Julien Green and Hopkins
 
   
   
   
  
       
      The Self as Other
      
  Peter Milward S.J.,
 Tokyo,
 Japan
  
  
    
    Fr Milward sees Hopkins life as person and poet in terms of a search for Self, partly by means of, partly at the expense of the Other. This is what inclines him at Oxford to form one of a close circle like-minded friends and what draws him to the remnants of the old Oxford Movement led by Edward Pusey and Henry Liddon and to read Newman's Apologia pro Vita Sua soon after its publication in 1864. For my text let me take three of the sonnets composed by Gerard Manley Hopkins at Dublin during his dark year of 1885 . . . 
 
 
   Read the rest of 'The Self as Other'
  
  
 
   
  
    Sister Gertrude and Hopkins  
 Delia Fabbroni-Gianotti Nesbitt,
 Oxford College,
 Emory, USA. 
   
    
    In "The Wreck of the Deutschland," Hopkins reconciles his vocation as a Jesuit priest and as a poet. Writing at the end of the time of his Spiritual Exercises, Hopkins brings to the poem his sense of the immanent presence of God and his spiritual struggle. In the poem Hopkins narrates the fateful event of the sinking of the ship Deutschland during a sea storm, and a nun's heroic actions and call to Christ, which spur a fusion of Hopkins' own religious love for Christ, with Christ's love for him, which represents the culmination of Ignatian spiritual exercises.
 
  Read the rest of this lecture: Hopkins and a Nun called Gertrude
 
  
 
  
  
    Hopkins and God
 James Mackey,
 University of Edinburgh,
 Scotland. 
    . . . imagination and its characteristic vision already encompasses the concept of revelation, and does so at any depth or height of reality we may care or dare to visit. To put the matter in the terms of Hopkins' own metaphysic and epistemology of instress/inscape: some power of being (perhaps what Dylan Thomas called 'the force that through the green fuse drives the flower'?) Read the rest of this Lecture    
    
 Hopkins and God
      
  
 
 
 
  
  
    The Mariology of The Wreck
  Aleksandra Kedzierska,
 Marie Curie University,
 Lublin, 
Poland. 
    The unique achievement of Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844-89) has long been recognized. One of the most outstanding English poets of the late nineteenth century, he made poetry read like a prayer, offering a profound insight into the world of the spirit, into the mystery of the Word "instressed" and "stressed" by word(s). For years now the critics have been concerned with exploring numerous aspects of the poet's doGerard Manleyatic Christianity (Leavis, 85), yet although they often emphasize the Christocentric character of his work, only a few seem to realize how crucial, and in fact indispensable, for his poetry and the religious quest it offers to the privileged reader (cf. Delli-Carpini, viii) is Hopkins's preoccupation with the Marian theme, represented in every major phase of his poetic life. 
 
  
  Read the rest of this Lecture The Mariology of the Wreck
  
  
  
  
    
     
      Appropriating Horace
      
  Brian Arkins,
 National University of Ireland,
 Galway, Ireland.
    Western writers have made very extensive use of the poetry of Horace. In speaking of this process, we tend to glibly employ nouns such as 'tradition', 'influence', 'legacy', and 'heritage', but the metaphors involved in these nouns require interrogation. The Oxford English Dictionary definitions of these nouns - respectively 'The action of handing over to another'; 'The action or fact of flowing'; 'anything handed down by an ancestor'; 'that which has been or may be inherited' - clearly show that, from the perspective of modern people, a passive process is being described. But when a modern person make use of Greek or Roman material, the process is, from their point of view, active. 
    
    
   Appropriating Horace ...'
  
 
  
  
  
    Gerard Manley Hopkins and Thomism of Saint Aquinas
     
    Myron Shibley,
 Franciscan University,
 Steubenville, USA.
    Thomas Aquinas affirms, "God is virtually everything," an idea that is capital in Gerard Manley Hopkins poetry. It is our contention that no one has ever better expressed in literature the Thomistic conception of creation than Gerard Manley Hopkins, well expressed in "Pied Beauty"  Hopkins rejects the philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas in favor of Duns Scotus, the Franciscan logician and theologian. It is the contention of this paper that on further analysis there is a deep "parenté" between Aquinas and Hopkins that is empirically verifiable. Read 'Pied Beauty' . . .
     Hopkins and Thomism of Aquinas 
   
   
 
  
      Gerard M. Hopkins and Contermplation
      
   Maria Lichtman,
 Beroea College,
 Draper,
 USA. 
   
   
    First, instead of a definition, I would like to offer a paradiGerard Manley experience of contemplation, that of Isaiah of Jerusalem, sometimes called First Isaiah: "In the year of King Uzziah's death, I saw the Lord seated on a high and lofty throne; his train filled the sanctuary" (Is. 6:1). Not only does Isaiah see the Lord, but he is literally dumb-founded, that is, mute before the vision, managing only to hear the Seraphim stammer out the phrase, "Holy, holy, holy, is Yahweh Sabaoth. Heaven and earth are filled with His glory."     
    
Hopkins and Contemplation
  
  
  
 Gerard Manley Hopkins and French Priest/Novelist, Jean Sulivan 
   
    
   Eamon Maher,
 Institute of Technology,
 Tallaght,
 Ireland 
   
      It is with some foreboding and not a little feeling of 'mauvaise foi' that I take the floor at this year's Hopkins' Summer School. Because, you see, Hopkins isn't someone whom I enjoyed reading as a young student. I realise now why that may have been the case. 
      He is a complex and difficult poet who, in order to be understood, requires readers who have endured hardship and despair in their own lives. In this he resembles Jean Sulivan (1913-1980), a writer whom I know somewhat better. I had the privilege of translating into English Sulivan's memoir of the death of his mother, Devance tout adieu or Anticipate Every Goodbye (Veritas, 2000), by its English title. . . 
     Hopkins and Jean Sulivan 
      
   
    
  
    Gerard Manley Hopkins and fellow Jesuit, Teilhard de Chardin 
   Russell Eliot Murphy,
 Little Rock University at Arkansas,
 USA. 
    
    It is ironic that in the midst of the present cacophony of vying moral, spiritual, and social authorities, poetry is in most intellectual quarters regarded as a species of discourse which can no longer - perhaps never could express universal truths since its meaning, we say, varies from reader to reader, culture to culture, age to age, and so forth. 
    Teilhard de Chardin and Hopkins
    
  
  
  
   
  Hopkins's Spiritual Life
  
  Elaine Murphy,
Hopkins Festival Committeet.
    
  
  Elaine Murphy traces Hopkins's Spiritual life from his conversion to Catholicism  in Oxford, his joining the Society of Jesus, his life as a Jesuit until his death in Ireland.His appeal to ‘sensual gross desires’, to ‘foul and cumber not the shaken plumage of My Spirit’s wings’ is a foretaste of his later thinking that poetry as a sensual activity was dangerous for his spiritual soul. 
    Hopkins' Spiritual Life  
  
    
 
Links to Hopkins Literary Festival 2002
  
 
  
  
  
    Links to Hopkins Literary Festival 2002
    Contemplation in Hopkins Poetry
    Hopkins and God 
    Hopkins and Teilhard de Chardin
    Saint Aquinas, Thomism and Gerard Manley Hopkins
    Saint Gertrude in Hopkins Poetry
    Influence of Horace onHopkins
    French Novelist Jean Sulivan and Hopkins
    Catholic  Novelist Julien Green and Hopkins
    Mariology in Hopkins Poetry
    Self as Other in Hopkins Poetry
    Irish Exile and Hopkins Terrible Sonnets
           
 
  
    Lectures from GM HOPKINS FESTIVAL 2023
    
      - Vision and perception in GM Hopkins’s ‘The peacock’s eye’  Katarzyna 
      Stefanowicz
 Gerard Manley Hopkins’s diary entries from his early Oxford years are a medley of poems, fragments of poems or prose texts
       but also sketches of natural phenomena or architectural (mostly gothic) features. In a letter to Alexander Baillie written
        around the time of composition He  was planning to follow in the footsteps of the members of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood 
        who had been known for writing poetry alongside painting pictures ... 
        Read more
      -  Morning's Minion:Hopkins,Trees and Birds  Margaret Ellsberg
 Margaret Ellsberg discusses  Hopkins's connection with trees and birds, and how in everything he wrote, he associates wild
       things with a state of rejuvenation. In a letter to Robert Bridges in 1881 about his poem “Inversnaid,” he 
       says “there’s something, if I could only seize it, on the decline of wild nature.” It turns out that Hopkins 
       himself--eye-witness accounts to the contrary notwithstanding--was rather wild.
   
      
       Read more
      
      -  Joyce, Newman and Hopkins : Desmond Egan
 Joyce's friend, Jacques Mercanton has recorded that he regarded Newman as ‘the greatest of English prose writers
’. Mercanton adds that Joyce spoke excitedly about an article that had just appeared in The Irish Times and had                to do with the University of Dublin, “sanctified’ by Cardinal Newman, Gerard Manley Hopkins and himself Read more ...
      - Hopkins and Death Eamon Kiernan
 An abiding fascination with death can be identified in the writings of  Gerard Manley Hopkins. Easily taken for a sign of pathological morbidity, the poet's interest in death can also be read more positively as indicating, his strong awareness of a fundamental human challenge and his deployment of his intellectual and artistic gifts to try to meet it.
        Hopkins's understanding of death is apocalyptic. ... As will be shown, apocalyptic thought reaches
        beyond temporal finality. Hopkins's apocalyptic view of death shows itself with perhaps the
        greatest consequence in those few works which make the actual event of
        death a primary concern and which, moreover, leave in place the ordinariness of dying,
        as opposed to portrayals of the exceptional deaths of saints and martyrs.
         Read more
 
 
 
 Lectures from Hopkins Literary Festival July 2022
 
  
 
Hopkins Dies in Dublin and is buried in Glasnevin Cemetary (Patrick Lonergan) 
Gerard Manley Hopkins and his friends in Dublin: (Michael McGinley) 
Hiberno English and Gerard Manley Hopkins's Poetry  : (Desmond Egan
 
 
 
  
  Lectures delivered at the Hopkins Literary Festival since 1987 
  
 
  
 
 
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