Dazzling in its prosodic innovations such as the sprung rhythm he pioneered & wide-ranging in its complexity & metaphysical interest. The Penguin Classics" edition of Gerard Manley Hopkins " Poems & Prose" is selected & edited with an introduction by W.H. Gardner. Closer to Dylan Thomas than Matthew Arnold in his creative violence & insistence on the sound of poetry Gerard Manley Hopkins was no staid conventional Victorian. On entering the Jesuit order the age of twenty-four he burnt all his poetry & resolved to write no more as not belonging to my profession unless by the wishes of my superiors. The poems letters & journal entries selected for this edition were written in the following twenty years of his life & published posthumously in 1918. His verse is wrought from the creative tensions & paradoxes of a poet-priest who wanted to evoke the spiritual essence of nature sensuously & to communicate this revelation in natural language & speech-rhythms while using condensed innovative diction & all the skills of poetic artifice. Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844-89) was born in Essex the eldest son of a prosperous middle-class family. He was educated at Highgate School & Balliol College Oxford where he read Classics & began his lifelong friendship with Robert Bridges. In 1866 he entered the Roman Catholic Church & two years later he became a member of the Society of Jesus. In 1877 he was ordained & was priest in a number of parishes including a slum district in Liverpool. From 1882 to 1884 he taught at Stonyhurst College & in 1884 he became Classics Professor at University College Dublin. In his lifetime Hopkins was hardly known as a poet except to one or two friends; his poems were not published until 1918 in a volume edited by Robert Bridges. If you enjoyed Hopkins " Poems & Prose" you might like John Clares " Selected Poems" also available in " Penguin Classics"."