LEADER 00000cam 22010571i 4500 001 ocm00359882 003 OCoLC 005 20200429123851.0 008 740605s1967 enkh b 001 pdeng 010 67026002 016 (AMICUS)000001025185 019 3347532|a59162253|a222327064|a926112961|a931195230 |a961645484|a962715407|a964169801|a966843893|a1000553493 |a1055438289|a1104810976 020 0192112619|q(hardcover) 020 9780192112613|q(hardcover) 020 0195001648|q(hardcover) 020 9780195001648|q(hardcover) 020 0192810944|q(paperback) 020 9780192810946|q(paperback) 035 (OCoLC)359882|z(OCoLC)3347532|z(OCoLC)59162253 |z(OCoLC)222327064|z(OCoLC)926112961|z(OCoLC)931195230 |z(OCoLC)961645484|z(OCoLC)962715407|z(OCoLC)964169801 |z(OCoLC)966843893|z(OCoLC)1000553493|z(OCoLC)1055438289 |z(OCoLC)1104810976 040 DLC|beng|erda|cDLC|dCQA|dPBE|dOCLCQ|dBAKER|dBTCTA|dTVC |dOCLCG|dUKV3G|dKIJ|dCNCGM|dOCLCQ|dOG#|dOCLCO|dVFQ|dOCLCF |dOCLCA|dOCLCQ|dGK8|dBHA|dOCLCO|dUKUOY|dOCLCQ|dOCLCO|dEUN |dUEJ|dNLC|dJED|dCS1|dOCLCO|dOCL|dLOY|dOCLCQ|dTYC|dOCL |dOCLCQ|dMIH|dOCLCA|dYBM|dOCLCQ|dOCLCO|dOCLCA|dAZM|dOCLCO |dBDP|dCPO|dOCLCO|dCBA|dOCLCO|dOCLCA|dIBR|dOCLCO|dOCL |dOCLCO|dOCL 049 CKEA 050 00 PR4803.H44|bA17 1967 055 4 PR4803 H44 A17 1967 082 04 821.8|bH77g 1967 100 1 Hopkins, Gerard Manley,|d1844-1889,|eauthor.|4aut 240 10 Poems 245 14 The poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins /|cedited with additional notes, a foreword on the revised text, and a new biographical and critical introduction by W.H. Gardner and N.H. MacKenzie. 250 Fourth edition /|bbased on the first edition of 1918 and enlarged to incorporate all known poems and fragments. 264 1 London ;|aNew York ;|aToronto :|bOxford University Press, |c1967. 264 3 Bungay, Suffolk [United Kingdom] :|bRichard Clay (The Chaucer Press) Ltd.,|c[1967] 264 4 |c©1967 300 lxvi, 362 pages :|bfacsimiles ;|c22 cm 336 text|btxt|2rdacontent 337 unmediated|bn|2rdamedia 338 volume|bnc|2rdacarrier 500 "Printed in Great Britain"--Title page verso. 504 Includes bibliographical references and index. 505 00 |tThe Escorial --|tA vision of the mermaids --|tWinter with the gulf stream --|tSpring and death --|tA soliloquy of one of the spies left in the wilderness --|tBarnfloor and Winepress --|tNew readings --|tHe hath abolished the old drouth --|tHeaven-haven --|tFor a picture of St. Dorothea --|tEaster Communion --|tTo Oxford --|tWhere are thou friend, whom I shall never see --|tThe beginning of the end --|tThe alchemist in the city --|tMyself unholy, from myself unholy --|tSee how Spring opens with disabling cold --|tMy prayers must meet a brazen heaven --|tLet me be to Thee as the circling bird --|tThe half-way house -- |tThe nightingale --|tThe habit of perfection --|tNondum - -|tEaster --|tLines for a picture of St. Dorothea --|tAd Mariam --|tRosa Mystica --|tDedication of the first edition (Poems 1876-89) --|tSonnet to G.M.H. /|gRobert Bridges -- Author's preface (with explanatory notes and examples by W.H.G. --|tThe wreck of Deutschland --|tThe silver jubilee --|tPenmaen pool --|tGod's grandeur --|tThe starlight night --|tSpring --|tIn the valley of the Elwy - -|tThe sea and the skylark --|tThe windhover --|tPied beauty --|tHurrahing in harvest --|tThe caged skylark -- |tThe lantern out of doors --|tThe loss of the Eurydice -- |tThe May magnificat --|tBinsey poplars --|tDuns Scotus's Oxford --|tHenry Purcell --|tThe candle indoors --|tThe hansome heart --|tThe Bugler's first communion --|tMorning, midday, and evening sacrifice --|tAndromeda --|tPeace -- |tAt the wedding march --|tFelix Randal --|tBrothers -- |tSpring and fall --|tInversnaid --|tAs kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame --|tRibblesdale --|tThe leaden echo and the golden echo --|tThe blessed Virgin compared to the air we breathe --|tSpelt from Sibyl's leaves --|tTo what serves mortal beauty --|tThe soldier -- |tCarrion comfort --|tNo worst, there is none --|tTo seem the stranger lies my lot, my life --|tI wake and feel the fell of dark not day --|tPatience, hard thing! the hard thing but to pray --|tMy own heart let me more have pity on --|tTom's Garland --|tHarry Ploughman --|tThat nature is a Heraclitean fire ... --|tIn honour of St. Alphonsus Rodriguez --|tThou art indeed just, Lord, if I contend -- |tThe shepherd's brow, fronting forked lightning --|tTo R.B. --|tIl mystico --|tA windy day in summer --|tA fragment of anything you like --|tFragments of Pilate -- |tA voice from the world --|tShe schools the flighty pupils of her eyes --|tThe lover's stars --|tDuring the eastering of untainted morns --|tHill, heaven and every field, are still --|tThe peacock's eye --|tLove preparing to fly --|tI must hunt down the prize --|tWhy should their foolish bands, their hopeless hearses --|tWhy if it be so, for the dismal morn --|tIt was a hard thing to undo this knot --|tGlimmer'd along the square-cut steep --|tLate I fell in the ecstasy --|tMiss Story's character! too much you ask --|tDid Helen steal my love from me --|tOf virtues I most warmly bless --|tModern poets --|tOn a poetess -- |tYou ask why can't Clarissa hold her tongue --|tOn one who borrowed his sermons --|tBy one of the old school who was bid to follow --|tBoughs being pruned, birds preened - -|tBy Mrs. Hopley. 505 00 |tSundry fragments and images --|tIo --|tThe rainbow -- |tYes for a time they held as well --|tFragments of Floris in Italy --|tI am like a slip of comet --|tNo, they are come; their horn is lifted up --|tNow I am minded to take pipe in hand --|tThe cold whip-adder unespied -- |tFragments of Richard --|tAll as the moth call'd Underwing alighted --|tThe Queen's crowning --|tTomorrow meet you? O not tomorrow --|tFragment of Stephen and Barberie --|tI hear a noise of waters drawn away --|tWhen eyes that cast about in heights of heaven --|tThe summer Malison --|tO death, death, he is come --|tBellisle! that is a fabling name, but we --|tConfirmed beauty will not bear a stress --|tBut what indeed is ask'd of me --|tTo Oxford --|tContinuation of R. Garnett's Nix --|tA noise of falls I am possessed by --|tO what a silence is this wilderness --|tMothers are doubtless happier for their babes --|tDaphne --|tFragments of Castara Victrix -- |tShakspere --|tTrees by their yield --|tA complaint -- |tMoonless darkness stands between --|tThe earth and heaven, so little known --|tAs it fell upon a day --|tIn the staring darkness --|tSumma --|tNot kind! to freeze me with forecast --|tThe elopement --|tSt. Thecla -- |tMoonrise --|tThe woodlark --|tOn St. Winefred --|tTo him who ever thougth with love of me --|tWhat being in rank- old nature should earlier have that breath been --|tCheery beggar --|tDenis, who motionable, alert, most vaulting wit --|tThe furl of fresh-leaved dogrose down --|tMargaret Clitheroe --|tRepeat that, repeat --|tThe child is father to the man --|tOn a piece of music --|tAshboughs --|tThe times are nightfall, look, their light grows less --|tHope holds to Christ the mind's own mirror out --|tSt. Winefred's well --|tTo his watch --|tStrike, churl; hurl cheerless wind --|tThee, God, I come from, to thee go -- |tWhat shall I do for the land that bred me --|tOn the portrait of two beautiful young people --|tThe sea took pity: it interposed with doom --|tEpithalamion -- |tPrometheus desmotes /|gtranslated from Aeschylus -- |tLove me as I love thee. O double sweet /|gtranslated from the Greek --|tInundiatio Oxoniana /|gtranslated from the Greek --|tTristu tu, memini, virgo /|gtranslated from Elegiacs --|tAfter the Convent Threshold /|gtranslated from Elegiacs --|tPersicos odi, puer, apparatus / |gtranslated from Horace --|tOdi profanum volgus et arceo /|gtranslated from Horace --|tJesu Dulcis Memoria / |gtranslated from the Latin --|tS. Thomae Aquinatis Rhythmus /|gtranslated from St. Thomas Aquainus --|tOratio Patris Condren --|tO Deus, ego amo te /|gtranslated from the Latin --|tO Deus, ego amo te /|gtranslated from the Welsh --|tCywydd /|gtranslated from the Welsh --|tAd episcopum salopiensem /|gtranslated from the Latin --|tAd reverendum patrem fratrem /|gtranslated from Thomam Burke --|tIn S. Winefridam /|gtranslated --|tHaec te jubent salvere, quod possunt, loca /|gtranslated --|tMiror surgentem per puram Oriona noctem /|gtranslated --|tAd matrem virginem /|gtranslated --|tMay lines --|tIn Theclam Virginem /|gtranslated --|tEpigram on Milton /|gtranslated from the Latin of Dryden --|tCome unto these yellow sands /|gtranslated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek --|tFull fathom five thy father lies /|gtranslated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek --|tWhile you here do snoring lie /|gtranslated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek --|tTell me where is Fancy bred /|gtranslated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek --|tOrpheus with his lute made trees / |gtranslated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek --|tWhen icicles hang by the wall /|gtranslated from Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek -- Incomplete Latin version of 'When icicles hang by the wall' 520 Biographical and critical essays supplement all of Hopkins' finished and fragmentary works. 530 Also issued online. 600 10 Hopkins, Gerard Manley,|d1844-1889|vBiography. 600 17 Hopkins, Gerard Manley,|d1844-1889|2fast |0(OCoLC)fst00051849 648 7 1800-1899|2fast 650 0 English poetry|y19th century. 650 0 Christian poetry|y19th century. 650 7 Christian poetry.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00859372 650 7 English poetry.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00912278 655 7 Biographies.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01919896 655 7 Poetry.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01423828 655 7 Poetry.|2lcgft 700 1 Bridges, Robert,|d1844-1930,|econtributor.|4ctb 700 1 Gardner, W. H.|q(William Henry),|d1902-|eeditor,|eauthor of introduction, etc.|4edt|4aui 700 1 MacKenzie, Norman H.,|eeditor,|eauthor of introduction, etc.|4edt|4aui 710 2 Richard Clay (The Chaucer Press),|eprinter.|4prt 710 2 Oxford University Press,|epublisher.|4pbl 776 08 |iOnline version:|aHopkins, Gerard Manley, 1844-1889. |sPoems.|tPoems of Gerard Manley Hopkins.|b4th ed. based on the 1st ed. of 1918 and enl. to incorporate all known poems and fragments.|dLondon, New York [etc.] Oxford U.P., 1967|w(OCoLC)561275731 994 C0|bCKE
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