What does Hopkins believe about the presence of God in the natural world?
Accordingly, why does Hopkins feel that the earth is charged with God grandeur?
Inscape describes the uniqueness of all things, while instress is the presence of God in that uniqueness. Again, Hopkins asserts that "the world is charged with the grandeur of God," which allows (in a parallel to the Resurrection) for the earth to be continually renewed (1).
Also asked, how does Hopkins compare the grandeur of God with Nature?
Hopkins compares the greatness of God to nature by writing about the way in which nature regenerates itself continuously. In "God's Grandeur," Hopkins writes about the way in which people destroy the earth and ruin its beauty for a time. Human toil makes the soil bare and leaves its mark on the earth.
The world is filled with the greatness of God. Men are born and die and are unaware of God's greatness. Because they are too concerned with work, men cannot understand the greatness of God.