Page 192 - 100 Best Loved Poems - Teaching Unit
P. 192

“The Windhover”
               by Gerard Manley Hopkins, pages 73-74

               Vocabulary
               minion – subordinate
               dauphin – prince
               wimpling – cloth headpiece
               chevalier – knight

               1.    Among the poem’s themes is the smooth merging of the windhover with the air. What
                     literary devices does Hopkins employ to have his language appear equally smooth and
                     fluid?










               2.    “The Windhover” is written with a meter in which the number of accents in a line is
                     counted, but not the number of syllables. What is the term for this type of meter?










               3.    The poem is a fourteen-line sonnet, consisting of an octave and two tercets. The subject
                     matter of the poem switches after the octave from the windhover to the speaker’s chevalier,
                     a medieval image of Christ on a horse. How are the two subjects linked by the speaker?










               4.    What is the speaker referring to when he says in line ten, “—the achieve of, the mastery of
                     the thing!”?




















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