Thomas Gray's Elegy Written in a Country ChurchyardHarold Bloom Chelsea House Publishers, 1987 - 151 sider |
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Side 57
... seems not to see in the mighty the possibility of recognisable merits , such potential as he next , returning to the " narrow cell " in the " neglected spot , ” proceeds to impute as often unrecognisable in the humble . On the one hand ...
... seems not to see in the mighty the possibility of recognisable merits , such potential as he next , returning to the " narrow cell " in the " neglected spot , ” proceeds to impute as often unrecognisable in the humble . On the one hand ...
Side 128
... seem a trifle ominous since the five hundred years between the thirteenth and eighteenth centuries seem sufficient ... seems to suggest that poetic power of the pro- phetic kind is intimately linked with disaster . A prophecy like this ...
... seem a trifle ominous since the five hundred years between the thirteenth and eighteenth centuries seem sufficient ... seems to suggest that poetic power of the pro- phetic kind is intimately linked with disaster . A prophecy like this ...
Side 132
... seems to supersede both his own living speech and the speech of the swain . And so urgently does the poet need the assurance that his final , posthumous language ( the epitaph ) will continue to assert itself be- yond his death that he ...
... seems to supersede both his own living speech and the speech of the swain . And so urgently does the poet need the assurance that his final , posthumous language ( the epitaph ) will continue to assert itself be- yond his death that he ...
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