English, asked by mentorszone, 9 months ago

Why does Hopkins compare the Holy Ghost to a Dove?

Answers

Answered by adventureisland
0

Explanation:

The poem states that God's glory inspires nature. The speaker connects this grandeur to two antithetic or different appearances of nature. First, he compares God's grandeur to the sun that shines and glows out immediately while one moves a bit of foil. In this picture, God's grandeur shows itself as a bright light. The speaker then examines God's grandeur to a concept different from that of light, by assuming it as a dark black oil that "crowds to greatness." This is a latent image of the particles of nature slowly pressed together to form a deep, dark, great grandeur. Working mutually, these two concepts imply certain ways God's grandeur resembles.

To learn more:

i)write a critical appreciation of The Hopkins God's grandeur ...

https://brainly.in/question/9950177

ii)Take up any one metaphor employed by Hopkins in god grandeur ...

https://brainly.in/question/11132565

Answered by smartbrainz
0

God's Grandeur "starts with a declaration that the world has the absolute strength of God, the energy of God. However, in the end it is temporary. The fire will go from it one day and it will reach a peak, then slowly spread, and then collapse

The speaker states that the natural world is indivisible from God, but temporary at the same time. The speaker needs to learn why the natural world is not properly cared for by humans. How are they not aware of the force of God that is in our world and value it? He says that people have been deceiving the planet relentlessly and trudging for too long now, and that industry is now burning the surface of the Earth. With this entire industry it seems blurry and out of sight and endless hard work covering it.

But don't be concerned–says the speaker–nature never ceases. It is lying like a hidden spring under the earth. And while sun still sets in the west with darkness and night, it always rises in the east with morning and light.

The speaker tells us that dawn follows night, and light follows darkness, while the Holy Ghost continues to float in the chaotic world, meditating deeply and thinking about it. The positive, however, is that the Holy Ghost watches over the earth and treats it in the same way a bird treats its unhatched eggs to provide ease, protection, light, beauty and movement.

Explanation:

  • The last lines state that the evening continues, "cause" the Holy Ghost floats around the globe, troubled, moist and benevolent. We could take it further still. During the baptism of Jesus the Holy Ghost (also known as the Holy Ghost) was called a dove. The Holy Ghost is part and parcel of the Holy Trinity, namely God and Jesus (father, soon and the holy spirit) in Christian theology.
  • The pictures of the dove have a dull mood tone, enhanced by the word "broods." Brood is, on the one hand, something difficult to consider profoundly. At the other hand, as she is sitting on the nest, a mother bird is brooding to help her eggs prepare to fly. The end of the poem indicates that the planet, so to speak, still has to be entirely born in an embryo.
  • The egg shell is related to the belief that the earth's hard surface is covered by the underlying structure. But this can be seen in a more optimistic light here in the conclusion. Talk about the contradictory comment of the speaker in line three: "It grows in glory." Does not an unborn chick achieve grandeur as he gets ready to be born? Nevertheless, the speaker always says the universe is fleeting, like a lightning bolt. This implies that the "rebirth" of the universe in the final stroke is just one step into the ultimate destiny of the word.

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i)write a critical appreciation of The Hopkins God's grandeur brainly.in/question/9950177

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