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Sunday, November 13, 2016

Pied Beauty - Praising God for Nature\'s Beauty

In the verse form, Pied Beauty, is a praise by Gerard Manley Hopkins. Many reports be explored and depicted, much(prenominal) as the penning that everyone should thank god for tout ensemble the beautiful and, dappled, things he has created for us. These things, that at commencement ceremony glance would not be considered beautiful. Hopkins makes it clear that he is a servant of paragon himself, by saying things such as, Glory be to divinity, and, sycophancy him (the divinity). The theme is effectively illustrated through the wide range of literary devices such as, structure and zeal, imagery, tropical language, enjambment, and rule of 3.\nGerard Manley Hopkins utilizes structure and style to explore the theme of the verse; that we should all praise the God for creating the beautiful nature. The poem begins and ends with a simple praise to God; Glory be to God for dappled things, (line 1), Praise Him, (line 11). This may be due to Hopkins phantasmal influence, he w as a Jesuit. The poem is written in such a way that it feels equal a hymn, a spectral song of praise for God. The poem is made up of 2 stanzas, with the rhyme scheme of ABCABC, DBEDE. The offset with 6 lines, and the second with 5. in that respect are no measuring stick number of syllables per line. However, look at the way that each chemical group of 3 lines is indented, except for the give-up the ghost line, Praise him. This line, un a analogous the rest, is clique in the middle to possibly suggest to the reader that it is like a concluding, amen, of a apparitional prayer. This links back to the theme of the poem, because the writer is purposely typography in such a way, so that the reader feels like they are reading a religious song. This makes it easier for Hopkins to illustrate the smart as a whip things God has invented. In the first 6 lines, Hopkins elaborates with examples of what things he representation to include under this championship of, dappled. In the f inal 5 lines, Hopkins goes on to focus more closely on the characteristics of the examples he has given in...

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