Book description
'Will surely rank as one of the foremost literary biographies of
our time.' John Carey, Sunday Times In his lifetime Gerard Manley
Hopkins (1844-1889) published just a single poem - only a few close
friends were aware he wrote. Much of his work was burnt by fellow
Jesuits on his death. And yet Hopkins is today a huge figure in
English literature. Homosexual but terribly repressed, he channeled
his emotions toward nature and God, with profound results. Princeton
emeritus professor Martin, the only biographer to have unrestricted
use of Hopkins' private papers, tells this extraordinary story from
Hopkins' early life and studies at Oxford, through his tortuous
conversion from Anglicanism to Catholicism, to his struggle in later
years to retain his very sanity. 'In Martin, the unhappy and tormented
genius has found the most sympathetic and intelligent interpreter...
[The book] goes to the heart of Hopkins, and plants him firmly before
us as a Victorian, and a great one.' Allan Massie, Sunday Telegraph
'Martin follows Hopkins through his toils with sympathy and a great
unshowy command of the facts. In this magnificently solicitous
biography he has re-established the contours of the story definitively
and made the homosexual drama integral to the better-known drama of
conversion and poetics.' Seamus Heaney, Independent on Sunday 'The
triumph of this learned, scrupulously detailed and persuasive
biography is that it brings the reader as near as it is perhaps
possible to come to living Hopkins' life, to sensing the mysterious
crushing pressures that were for him intimately bound up with the
richness and complexity of his writing.' Hilary Spurling, Daily Telegraph
Robert Bernard Martin (1918-1999) was born in Illinois. He had a
distinguished academic career and was Professor Emeritus of English at
Princeton University, USA, from 1951 to 1975, before retiring to Oxford,
where he became a writer. He published ten books about the Victorian
era, including biographies such as Tennyson, the Unquiet Heart in 1980
and A Very Private Life in 1991.