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Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
noun
- a poem (1750) by Thomas Gray.
âElegy Written in a Country Churchyardâ
- (1751) An enduringly popular poem by the English poet Thomas Gray. It contains the lines âFull many a flower is born to blush unseen / And waste its sweetness on the desert air,â âThe paths of glory lead but to the grave,â and âfar from the madding crowd's ignoble strife / Their sober wishes never learned to stray.â
Example Sentences
As Thomas Gray writes in âElegy Written in a Country Churchyard,â a poem I used to teach my high-school students: âFull many a flowâr is born to blush unseen, / And waste its sweetness on the desert air.â
I especially loved the famous prefaces to classic books and the poetry â Grayâs âElegy Written in a Country Churchyardâ rings in my ears still.
I thought of the Bible, but in the end decided poetry might be more soothing, so I brought an anthology from my room and read Grayâs âElegy Written in a Country Churchyard.â
The phrase subtly alludes to another meditation on unrealized genius, âSome mute inglorious Milton here may rest,â from Thomas Grayâs âElegy Written in a Country Churchyard.â
Forget Hamlet's soliloquies about this mortal coil of ours; forget Hieronymus Bosch's comic hellscapes; forget Thomas Gray's Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard.
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