Thomas Gray's Elegy Written in a Country ChurchyardHarold Bloom Chelsea House Publishers, 1987 - 151 sider |
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Side 22
... imaginative recreation of the lives of the dead villagers combines a sympathy for their lot , unusual for its age , with a degree of envy of their vitality and usefulness , but his feelings about them are essen- tially subservient to ...
... imaginative recreation of the lives of the dead villagers combines a sympathy for their lot , unusual for its age , with a degree of envy of their vitality and usefulness , but his feelings about them are essen- tially subservient to ...
Side 108
... imaginative empathy of the speaker . This analysis by no means exhausts the riches of these opening lines ; I have said nothing , for instance , about their sounds and rhythms , obviously a powerful force in the poem . The point I want ...
... imaginative empathy of the speaker . This analysis by no means exhausts the riches of these opening lines ; I have said nothing , for instance , about their sounds and rhythms , obviously a powerful force in the poem . The point I want ...
Side 126
... imaginative foundations of much of his verse . The decision to add in the 1768 edition notes to The Progress and its companion ode , The Bard , serves only to emphasize the way in which the poems are , in a sense , already footnoted ...
... imaginative foundations of much of his verse . The decision to add in the 1768 edition notes to The Progress and its companion ode , The Bard , serves only to emphasize the way in which the poems are , in a sense , already footnoted ...
Innhold
Grays Personal Elegy | 39 |
A Poem of Moral Choice | 69 |
Instability in Grays | 83 |
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appears becomes beginning clear close concern conclusion contrast conventional Country Churchyard course critics curfew darkness dead death described desire earlier effect elegist English epitaph Eton example expression fact fame fate feeling figure final fire forefathers grave Gray Gray's Elegy human humble imaginative implied important isolation Johnson kind kindred spirit later lead limited lines literary living look Lycidas lyric meaning memorial Milton mind moral mourned mute narrator nature never noted object obscurity opening original pastoral perhaps poem poem's poet poet's poetic poetry poor possible present Proud question reader reasons relate remains rest rich rustics seems seen sense setting speaker spirit stanza structure suggests swain thee theme thing thought tion tomb tradition truth University villagers virtues voice West whole Wishes writing written youth