Thomas Gray's Elegy Written in a Country ChurchyardHarold Bloom Chelsea House Publishers, 1987 - 151 sider |
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Side 12
... rich and poor when faced with death . This section of the poem has been thoroughly discussed , but perhaps one further point can be made about it . While it is quite true , as Mr. Brooks shows , that rich and poor are equalized by death ...
... rich and poor when faced with death . This section of the poem has been thoroughly discussed , but perhaps one further point can be made about it . While it is quite true , as Mr. Brooks shows , that rich and poor are equalized by death ...
Side 14
... rich or poor , as well as the alienation between rich and poor , and second with the inevitability of death and the human urge to transcend it . By adding stanzas 20-21 ( " Yet ev'n these bones from insult to protect " ) to the original ...
... rich or poor , as well as the alienation between rich and poor , and second with the inevitability of death and the human urge to transcend it . By adding stanzas 20-21 ( " Yet ev'n these bones from insult to protect " ) to the original ...
Side 16
... rich - poor contrast in stanzas 22-23 : " On some fond breast the parting soul relies . " If considering the revisions of the poem has helped to clarify its structure and meaning , the transformation of the " Stanza's " into the Elegy ...
... rich - poor contrast in stanzas 22-23 : " On some fond breast the parting soul relies . " If considering the revisions of the poem has helped to clarify its structure and meaning , the transformation of the " Stanza's " into the Elegy ...
Innhold
Grays Personal Elegy | 39 |
A Poem of Moral Choice | 69 |
Instability in Grays | 83 |
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anxiety of influence ashes live Bard blazing hearth cast one longing contrast conventional Country Churchyard critics curfew tolls death e'er echo eighteenth-century elegist English Elegy epitaph Eric Smith Eton College Ev'n fame unknown fate final frail memorial Frank Brady glory lead grave Gray Gray's poetry Harold Bloom hoary-headed swain homeward plods Horace Walpole human humble Il Penseroso imaginative Innocence Johnson kindred spirit lines literary live their wonted lonely Contemplation Lycidas lyric meditation melancholy moral mourned mute inglorious Milton narrator narrow cell object obscurity original pastoral elegy paths of glory Penseroso perhaps poem's poet poet's poetic praise present Progress of Poesy Proud quatrain reader rich and poor Richard West rude Forefathers rustics seems sense sonnet speaker stanza suggests syntax thee theme Thomas Gray tion tomb the voice tradition University verb villagers virtues voice of Nature Walpole William Empson William Marsh Rice wonted Fires youth