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Societies Neglect For God's Grandeur

Societies Neglect For God's Grandeur

In Gerard Manley Hopkins' sonnet "God's Grandeur," the speaker is an omniscient observer of mankind -- probably Hopkins himself. He is speaking to man in an effort to help society realize the beauty in life. Hopkins senses several errors in his species. He believes society fails to recognize the grandeur of God and is content to tread the earth and waste vast resources. "God's Grandeur" appeals to the readers' sensitivity and reveals the unlimited joys offered by nature. "God's Grandeur" can be divided into four sections:

Lines 1-4: a presentation of God's grandeur

Lines 5-8: a statement of man's feeble efforts

Lines 9-12: a praise of nature's resilient power

Lines 13-14: a return to God's benign power

The tone of this magnificent sonnet moves from a powerful capitulation of God's omnipotence, to a dreary expression of man's destruction of his earth, to a delicate statement of nature's everlasting fecundity, and finally to a gentle image of God protecting his creation.

Moving through the four marked sections of Hopkins's poem, the theme is quite clear: man is so imprisoned in the daily affairs of life (his "trade" and "toil"), that he fails to recognize the beauty and power o

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Approximate Word count = 973
Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page double spaced)

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