Gerard Manley Hopkins: his life and extraordinary poetry

May 12, 2024

Gerard Manley Hopkins is regarded as one the Victorian era’s greatest poets. Raised in a Church of England family, he studied classics at Oxford. In 1864, he converted to Catholicism after reading John Henry Newman’s account of his own conversion. Hopkins soon decided to become a priest himself, and in 1867 he entered a Jesuit novitiate near London.

He became deeply influenced by 13th century Franciscan philosopher-theologian John Duns Scotus (1266-1308), whose doctrine of ‘thisness’ – haecceity – is derived from haec, the Latin word for “this.”

God, according to Scotus, is continuously choosing each created thing specifically to exist, moment by moment. The direct implication of this truth is that love must precede all true knowledge, which was at the heart of all Franciscan-based philosophy. Hopkins’ revolutionary poetry is infused by this belief.

Watch a terrific 1986 BBC documentary on the life and poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins at: https://www.newpilgrimpath.ie/