Thomas Gray's Elegy Written in a Country ChurchyardHarold Bloom Chelsea House Publishers, 1987 - 151 sider |
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Side 20
... villagers , whose talents had been repressed and frozen by " Chill Penury . " Their potential had been stunted and therefore unfulfilled ; what the " mute inglorious Milton " might have achieved was acces- sible only to the sympathetic ...
... villagers , whose talents had been repressed and frozen by " Chill Penury . " Their potential had been stunted and therefore unfulfilled ; what the " mute inglorious Milton " might have achieved was acces- sible only to the sympathetic ...
Side 22
... villager is " better off without opportunities , " as Professor Empson suggests : he is trying to per- suade himself that he prefers to remain in obscurity . The poet's imaginative recreation of the lives of the dead villagers combines ...
... villager is " better off without opportunities , " as Professor Empson suggests : he is trying to per- suade himself that he prefers to remain in obscurity . The poet's imaginative recreation of the lives of the dead villagers combines ...
Side 26
... villagers . Melancholy leads to sen- sibility and true sensibility to pity and compassion for others : away finally from the self towards sympathy with , for example , the lot of the humble villagers , as the poem itself has shown ...
... villagers . Melancholy leads to sen- sibility and true sensibility to pity and compassion for others : away finally from the self towards sympathy with , for example , the lot of the humble villagers , as the poem itself has shown ...
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