Letter from the Editor
"Glory be to God for dappled things," writes the poet Gerard Manley
Hopkins in the poem "Pied Beauty," first naming things literally
colored with contrasting speckles and patches: streaked skies, spotted
trout, great fields sectioned and ploughed and planted. He then
extends his definition of "dappled" to mean
"…[a]ll things counter, original, spare, strange;
Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?)
With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim…"
According to Hopkins, dappled things are those things we find
irregular and surprising that are in fact lovelier and more lovable
for their being irregular and surprising. We can think of an infinite
number of such strangely beautiful things: the patches on an overripe
fruit, a sudden slow and sad passage in a song, even the inexplicable
peace that comes of suffering. These "dappled things," things at once
"swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim," confound our human love for
safety, thwart our wish to see unblemished fruit, to listen to music
that does not carry us away, to live a life without challenge. How
can it be that we grow to love things that once made us uncomfortable,
that we rejoice in things we once found imperfect? How is it that the
things, the events, and the men that the world finds weakest and worst
often give rise to the greatest joy? It is a mystery, in the fullest
sense of the term, and "Pied Beauty" delights in it.
We at Dappled Things delight, too: in that mystery, and in the genius
of Gerard Manley Hopkins, that he can muse in a poem on "skies of
couple-color as a brinded cow" and yet through that poem hint at the
Passion, Death, and Resurrection of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
For surely that is the most dappled thing in all human history, the
strangest and the most beautiful, at once "swift, slow; sweet, sour;
adazzle, dim."
The Psalmist invites us, "Come, let us sing to the Lord, and shout with joy
to the Rock who saves us!" We the editors of Dappled Things invite
you, our Catholic brothers and sisters, to sing and shout in our pages
about our dappled world. Write about spotted trout and brinded cows,
or write about the Passion, Death, and Resurrection of our Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ. We ask only that your work be inspired by your
love for Him and His Church in the fullness of her Scripture and
Tradition, her sacraments, and her communion of saints.
Mary Angelita Ruiz
Editor-in-Chief