Difference between revisions of "Thomas Gray"

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(Created page with "Thomas Gray ==Country== Great Britain ==Birth - Death== 1716 - 1771 ==Occupation== Poet ==Description== Considered the second...")
 
 
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==Description==
 
==Description==
  
Considered the second most important poet of the eighteenth century.  Subject matter of his poems focused on notions of rejection of sexual desire, with the figure of the poet in his poems being a lonely, alienated, and marginal one, and various muses or surrogate-mother figures being invoked.  Most famous for his poem ‘Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard’.  Also known for 'Hymn to Adversity' (1753) and the unfinished 'Hymn to Ignorance' (1768).  Known for his extensible correspondence.  Notable loves of his life include [[Horace Walpole]] and Henry Tuthill.
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Considered the second most important poet of the eighteenth century.  Subject matter of his poems focused on notions of rejection of sexual desire, with the figure of the poet in his poems being a lonely, alienated, and marginal one, and various muses or surrogate-mother figures being invoked.  Most famous for his poem ‘Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard’.  Also known for 'Hymn to Adversity' (1753) and the unfinished 'Hymn to Ignorance' (1768).  Known for his extensible correspondence.  Notable loves of his life include [[Horace William, 4th Earl of Orford Walpole]] and Henry Tuthill.
  
 
==Further Reading/Research==
 
==Further Reading/Research==

Latest revision as of 13:38, 7 August 2017

Thomas Gray

Country

Great Britain

Birth - Death

1716 - 1771

Occupation

Poet

Description

Considered the second most important poet of the eighteenth century. Subject matter of his poems focused on notions of rejection of sexual desire, with the figure of the poet in his poems being a lonely, alienated, and marginal one, and various muses or surrogate-mother figures being invoked. Most famous for his poem ‘Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard’. Also known for 'Hymn to Adversity' (1753) and the unfinished 'Hymn to Ignorance' (1768). Known for his extensible correspondence. Notable loves of his life include Horace William, 4th Earl of Orford Walpole and Henry Tuthill.

Further Reading/Research