Eucharistic Poetry: The Search for Presence in the Writings of John Donne, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Dylan Thomas, and Geoffrey HillBucknell University Press, 1992 - 241 pages Ranging from the Anglican eschatological vision of John Donne, to the Roman Catholic incarnational mode of Gerard Manley Hopkins, to the search for spiritual presence in the modern world of spiritual absence confronted by Dylan Thomas and Geoffrey Hill, this book argues for a poetics of real presence. |
Table des matières
Preface | 9 |
Donnes Struggle | 33 |
Hopkinss | 69 |
Droits d'auteur | |
4 autres sections non affichées
Expressions et termes fréquents
action actual allows analogy anamnesis Anglican argues assent attempt become belief blood body bread ceremony Christ Christian communicant communion conversion create critics cross darkness death Deutschland divine Donne Donne's doubling Dylan Thomas earth elements eucharistic experience faith final flesh forces Geoffrey Gerard Manley Hopkins God's grace ground heart Hill Hill's Holy Hopkins Hopkins's human imagery Incarnation inscape instress John language later light lines linguistic literal logic lovers meaning metaphor moves mystery nature notes object offers Oxford paradox Passion physical poem poet poet's poetic poetry Prayer reader reading Real Presence realization religious resurrection revelation reverse rhythm ritual Roman Catholic sacramental secular seems semantic sense Sermons sonnet soul speaker Speaking specifically spiritual stanza stress struggle suggests symbol syntax things Thomas Thomas's tion traditional transformation transubstantiation true turn union University Press vision voice wine words wound writing York