English, asked by Buddhadev9217, 1 year ago

Short note in my words topic is God's grandeur is reflected in the beauty of nature

Answers

Answered by jasdhaliwal1410
1

This poem is a bright example of the poems about our Mother Nature. It starts with a speaker’s claim that our planet is vital and full of special power. This power comes, of course, from our Creator, God. However, what troubles the protagonist is that the Earth is temporary while God is eternal. One day, our planet is bound to reach its peak and collapse.

The main idea that the author carries through the poem is that God and nature are inseparable. The speaker wonders, why people fail to take care of their environment. Although, God is powerful and eternal, it has been proven that irresponsible human behavior can cause great danger and the consequences of it may be fatal.


The protagonist is fed up with people and their irresponsible deeds. He says that people have been around way too long, endlessly trudging through, and now the surface is callous and the natural resources are heavily used up. It is impossible to imagine our planet without people, yet the absence of human beings would certainly do it justice. Nowadays, everything is invaded by people, everything smells like people and people’s influence is unbearable.


In this industrialized world, a man has lost its vital connection with nature. One no longer walks the fields barefoot; everybody is forced to wear shoes, which makes a human being distant from Mother Nature.


Although the world has been inevitably changed by men, hope has not yet vanished. The speaker assures the readers that God is still watching over his creation. That is why the sun continues to set and rise; that is why seasons change and after a cold and tiring winter, spring comes full of hope and new beginnings.


What is also fascinating about this poem by Gerard Manley Hopkins is its meter and rhythm. The author follows the form of Italian sonnet, which has fourteen lines. Hopkins separates his poem into two stanzas; one eight lines and the other one – six. This division compares the stanzas and makes a clearer contrast between them. What concerns the rhythm of the poem, Hopkins wrote it in so-called “sprung rhythm”, which he became famous for. The relations of stressed and unstressed vowels are more complicated in sprung rhythm, than is regular speech. This gives the poem a unique flavor as, on the one hand, its meter is that of traditional Italian sonnet, but the rhythm is rather innovative. Thus, the author uses his creativity and combines tradition and innovation in his memorable poem.

Answered by arjunasaradhi
0

"God’s Grandeur" starts off with a claim: the earth is full God’s special power, God’s vitality. But the earth is ultimately temporary. The fire will go from it one day. It will reach a peak, then slowly spread, and then collapse. (This is confusing – don’t try to take Hopkins too literally. Let your imagination feel and see the images he presents).

The speaker states that the natural world is inseparable from God, but at the same time temporary. The speaker wants to know why don’t people don't take better care of the natural world. Why don’t they recognize and respect the power of God that is running through our environment? He says that people have been endlessly tromping and trudging through the world for so long, and now the surface of the earth is calloused and burnt over by industry. It looks blurry and out of focus with all this industry, and endless hard work covering it.

According to the speaker, we humans stunk up the earth – everything looks and smells like people, and all the bad things people do. (The speaker doesn’t sound too keen on people here.) The ground we walk on doesn’t have any flowers or trees or grass on it. And we have to wear shoes, so we can no longer feel the ground itself. We have lost our connection with the natural world.

But don’t worry – the speaker assures us – nature never stops. It’s hiding underground, like a hidden spring. And even though the sun always sets in the west bringing darkness and night, it always rises again in the east, bringing light and morning.

The speaker assures us that morning follows night, and light follows darkness, because the Holy Ghost is always hovering over the messed up world, pondering deeply, and worried. The upside, though, is that the Holy Ghost watches over the world and treats it in much the same way a bird would treat her unhatched eggs, providing comfort, security, warmth, beauty, and motion.

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