English poet, Gerard Manley Hopkins, found a welcome haven in Monasterevin. Now, this small Irish village hosts HOPKINS 2000, an international poetry festival

While living in Dublin, Hopkins found a supportive haven inMonasterevin, a village in the south west of Ireland. The poet, Gerard Manley Hopkins, born in England in 1844, spent five and a half years, in Ireland. From 1883, he taught at Newman's Catholic University in Earlsfort Terrace, Dublin (now Unversity College , Dublin (UCD) at Belfield). The poet died at Newman House, on St. Stephen's Green, in 1889. Gerard Manley Hopkins was buried in the Jesuit Plot in Glasnevin Cemetery, Dublin. The poet visited Monasterevin, his rural haven, at least 7 times declaring that he 'felt better for the delicious bog air of Monasterevin'.


 

 

Monasterevin, 'one of the props and struts of my existence.'

'I should have felt better for the delicious bog air of Monasterevin.'

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Poet GM HOPKINS visited Monasterevin at least 7 times

The poet visited Monasterevin at least seven times, a guest of a Miss Cassidy. He visited Monasterevin at least at,

  • Christmas 1886,
  • in 1887
  • in January,
  • in March,
  • in June
  • and at Christmas 1887,
  • at Christmas 1888,
  • and in March 1889.

On the 2nd of January 1887 he wrote from Monasterevin to his friend and fellow poet, Robert Bridges:

  Our Institute provides us means of discouragement, and on me at all events they have had all the effects that could be expected or wished and rather more . . . I am staying (till tomorrow morning, alas) with kind people at a nice place (Monasterevin).

Gerard Manley Hopkins poetry

Miss Cassidy's House overlooking the "burling Barrow brown"
where Hopkins stayed when visiting Monasterevin. This House is now the Generalate of the Presetnation Sisters.


 

Hopkins spent 'some very pleasant days down at Monasterevin'

On 24 January 1887, the poet wrote to his mother:

  I had, in spite of the severe cold, some very pleasant days down at Monasterevin in Co.Kildare at Christmas and again at New Year and it was a happy acquaintance to make, for they made no secret of liking me and want me to go down again.  

On March 29th, 1887, he wrote

  I should have felt better for the delicious bog air of Monasterevin.
 

The River Barrow, 'burling Barrow brown'

Among his last sketches, one appers to be the River Barrow with 4 trees in the background. It is signed, Monasterevin, Dec. 29, '88 .

The River Barrow featured in his unfinished poem: 'On the portrait of Two Beautiful Young People'. 'The burling Barrow brown', refers to the rusty brown colour the river water acquires as it meanders at a leisurely pace through surrounding bogland.


Monasterevin, 'one of the props and struts of my existence.'

In his last letter to future Poet Laureate, Robert Bridges, Hopkins wrote in reply to Bridges's asking : "Who is Miss Cassidy?".....

  She is an elderly lady who by often asking me down to Monasterevin and by the change and holiday her kind hospitality provides is become one of the props and struts of my existence.  

The Presentation Sisters, who now own this house, in the Hopkins haven, continue the Cassidy tradition of hospitality. Each year, they welcome visitors to the Hopkins International Summer School to this fine house for a Poetry Reading.


A Curse on Abbey Lands Confiscated by Henry V111

In this letter, Hopkins fondly described Monasterevin,

  St.Evin founded the Monastery: a singular story is told of him. Henry VIII confiscated it and it became the property of Lord Drogheda* The usual curse on abbey lands attends it and it never passes down in the direct line. The present Lady and Lord Drogheda have no issue. Outside Moore Abbey, which is in a beautiful park, the country is flat, bogs, and river and canals. The river is the Barrow, which the old Irish poet calls the dumb Barrow. I call it the 'Burling Barrow Brown'. Both descriptions are true. The country has nevertheless a charm. The two beautiful young people live within an easy drive.  

* Lord Drogheda and Moore Abbey. The Abbey and lands were bought by the famous Irish tenor, Count John McCormack. eventually sold again, this time, to the Sisters of Charity who are still there. The Sisters, very kindly, allow the GM Hopkins Society host a Classical Music Concert in the Abbey Library, where McCormack's piano still stands See Advance Programme for details

(This site is maintained by the Gerard Manley Hopkins Society, Monasterevin, Co. Kildare, Ireland. Webmaster)


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