Summary of Pied Beauty by G M Hopkins
In the final
five lines, Hopkins goes on to consider more closely the characteristics of
these examples he has given, attaching moral qualities now to the concept of
variety and diversity that he has elaborated thus far mostly in terms of
physical characteristics. The poem becomes an apology for these unconventional
or “strange” things, things that might not normally be valued or thought
beautiful. They are all, he avers, creations of God, which, in their
multiplicity, point always to the unity and permanence of His power and inspire
us to “Praise Him.”
Form
This is one of Hopkins’s “curtal” (or curtailed) sonnets, in
which he miniaturizes the traditional sonnet form by reducing the eight lines
of the octave to six (here two tercets rhyming ABC ABC) and shortening the six lines of the
sestet to four and a half. This alteration of the sonnet form is quite fitting
for a poem advocating originality and contrariness. The strikingly musical
repetition of sounds throughout the poem (“dappled,” “stipple,” “tackle,”
“fickle,” “freckled,” “adazzle,” for example) enacts the creative act the poem
glorifies: the weaving together of diverse things into a pleasing and coherent
whole.
Commentary
This
poem is a miniature or set-piece, and a kind of ritual observance. It begins
and ends with variations on the mottoes of the Jesuit order (“to the greater
glory of God” and “praise to God always”), which give it a traditional flavor,
tempering the unorthodoxy of its appreciations. The parallelism of the
beginning and end correspond to a larger symmetry within the poem: the first
part (the shortened octave) begins with God and then moves to praise his
creations. The last four-and-a-half lines reverse this movement, beginning with
the characteristics of things in the world and then tracing them back to a
final affirmation of God. The delay of the verb in this extended sentence makes
this return all the more satisfying when it comes; the long and list-like
predicate, which captures the multiplicity of the created world, at last yields
in the penultimate line to a striking verb of creation (fathers-forth) and then
leads us to acknowledge an absolute subject, God the Creator. The poem is thus
a hymn of creation, praising God by praising the created world. It expresses
the theological position that the great variety in the natural world is a
testimony to the perfect unity of God and the infinitude of His creative power.
In the context of a Victorian age that valued uniformity, efficiency, and
standardization, this theological notion takes on a tone of protest.
Why does Hopkins choose to commend “dappled things” in
particular? The first stanza would lead the reader to believe that their significance
is an aesthetic one: In showing how contrasts and juxtapositions increase the
richness of our surroundings, Hopkins describes variations in color and
texture—of the sensory. The mention of the “fresh-firecoal chestnut-falls” in
the fourth line, however, introduces a moral tenor to the list. Though the
description is still physical, the idea of a nugget of goodness imprisoned
within a hard exterior invites a consideration of essential value in a way that the speckles on a
cow, for example, do not. The image transcends the physical, implying how the
physical links to the spiritual and meditating on the relationship between body
and soul. Lines five and six then serve to connect these musings to human life
and activity. Hopkins first introduces a landscape whose characteristics derive
from man’s alteration (the fields), and then includes “trades,” “gear,”
“tackle,” and “trim” as diverse items that are man-made. But he then goes on to
include these things, along with the preceding list, as part of God’s work.
Hopkins
does not refer explicitly to human beings themselves, or to the variations that
exist among them, in his catalogue of the dappled and diverse. But the next
section opens with a list of qualities (“counter, original, spare, strange”)
which, though they doggedly refer to “things” rather than people, cannot but be
considered in moral terms as well; Hopkins’s own life, and particularly his
poetry, had at the time been described in those very terms. With “fickle” and
“freckled” in the eighth line, Hopkins introduces a moral and an aesthetic
quality, each of which would conventionally convey a negative judgment, in
order to fold even the base and the ugly back into his worshipful inventory of
God’s gloriously “pied” creation.
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