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This was the prized, the desirable sight, | unsought, presented so easily, Parted me leaf and leaf, divided me, : eyelid and eyelid of slumber.
"Moonrise June 19, 1876"'
In 1874, while he was teaching at Manresa College, Roehampton, Gerard Manley Hopkins composed a set of lecture notes entitled "Rhythm and the Other Structural Parts of Rhetoric? Verse." The lecture begins with a definition of verse as an audible pattern:
Verse is speech having a marked figure, order of sounds independent of meaning and such as can be shifted from one word or words to others without changing. It is figure of spoken sounds
Hopkins' insistence on the sound of poetic structure is also applied to rhyme. Having mapped out the essentials of Classical meter, he then notes some rules for rhyme. Under the heading "Rlryme to the ear and rhyme to the eye, " he writes:
The so-called rhyme to the eye is when the syllables are spelt alike, as plough and though and cough and rough and enough; but this is a fiction, there is no rhyme but to the ear: rhyme to the eye is correspondence of parts in pictorial art or in an infinity of natural things as the two eyes and the two sides of the body generally, butterfly's wings, paired leaves, shadows in glass or water. (Journals, p. 286).
No sooner has Hopkins located verse within the aural world than the second half of his statement opens up something much more interesting: a definition of "rhyme to the eye," not as a technical element of prosody, but as a kind of visual unity available as the correspondence of form within art or as symmetry in nature, either in paired opposites or in reflection. Hopkins goes on to say that the very notion of eye rhyme is invalid because of the nature of rhyme as a meeting of the like and the unlike: "There are two elements in the beauty rhyme has to the mind, the likeness or sameness of sound and the unlikeness or difference of meaning (Journals, p. 286). Rhyme, under Hopkins' rubric here, is not only the matching of words in patterns on the page? it is a system of viewing reality based on the recognition of...