Intimations of Classical Notions of Time in Thomas Gray’s Early Poetry

Kirill Ole Thompson

Abstract


The present study makes the case that Thomas Gray (1716-1771) presents his poetic musings in his early odes and sonnet against the backdrop two classical conceptions of time, cyclical time and linear time, and this casts interpretive light on his Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard. Gray’s early poems (1742)—Ode on the Spring, Ode to a Distant Prospect of Eton College, and Sonnet on the Death of Richard West— open with pastoral scenes set in cyclical time as foils for ruminations about human existence in linear time. He goes from adopting a pastoral pose and viewing human life as a brief flutter in the Spring ode, to casting shadows over the pastoral scenes in the Eton ode, to lamenting the pastoral in his Sonnet. Gray’s evolving view of life in linear time informs the Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard (1750). The twilight opening of this poem contrasts with the morning openings of the early poems. Falling darkness throws the poet back into his private musings; the glimmering; darkening landscape stirs him to reflect on mortal truths. The Elegy closes with a forlorn pastoral poet whose Muse does not arrive to offer him access to redemptive cyclical time: who is this poet? Is it Gray? Is it Gray in youth? What is the message? In a later poem, Hymn to Adversity, Gray sees the possibility of rebirth and meaning in human life in linear time.


Keywords


classical allusion, pastoral, elegy, mortality, meaning of life

Full Text:

HTML PDF

References


Bibliography

Primary Sources

Lonsdale, Roger. 1969. The Poems of Thomas Gray, William Collins, Oliver Goldsmith. London: Longmans.

Starr, H.W. and J.R. Hendrickson, ed. 1966. The Complete Poems of Thomas Gray: English, Latin, and Greek. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Tovey, D.C. 1898. Gray’s English Poems, Original, and Translated from the Norse and Welsh. Cambridge: At the University Press.

Secondary Sources

Baldwin, Barry. 1994. “On Some Greek and Latin Poems by Thomas Gray.” International Journal For the Classical Tradition vol. 1, no. 1 (Summer): 71-88.

Bentman, R. 1992. “Thomas Gray and the Poetry of ‘Hopeless Love’.” Journal of Sexuality Vol. 3, no. 2.

Bloom, Harold, ed. 1987. Thomas Gray’s Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard. New York: Chelsea House.

Burrow, J.A. 1986. The Ages of Man: A Study in Medieval Writing and Thought. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Campbell, Robin. 1969. Seneca: Letters from a Stoic. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.

Carper, Thomas R. 1987. “Gray’s Personal Elegy.” In Harold Bloom ed. Thomas Gray’s Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard, pp. 39-50.

Curr, Matthew. 2002. The Consolation of Otherness: The Male Love Elegy in Milton, Gray, and Tennyson. Jefferson, NC and London: MacFarland & Co. Publishers.

Downey, James, and Ben Jones, eds. 1974. Fearful Joy: Papers from the Thomas Gray Bicentenary Conference at Carleton University. Montreal: Montreal-Queens University Press.

Farquharson, A.S.L., trans. 1944. The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius Antonius. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Farrell, James. 1991. Virgil’s Georgics and the Traditions of Ancient Epic. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Gleckner. Robert F. 1997. Gray Agonistes: Gray and Masculine Friendship. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins.

Godolphin, Francis R.B. 1949. The Latin Poets. New York: Modern Library.

Golden, Morris. 1964. Thomas Gray. New York: Twayne Publishers.

Gummere, R.M. 1953. Seneca Ad Lucilium Epistulae Morales. 3 vols. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Hadas, Moses, ed. 1958. The Stoic Philosophy of Seneca. New York: Doubleday Anchor.

Hutchings, W. 1995. “Conversations with a Shadow: Thomas Gray’s Latin Poems to Richard West.”Studies in Philology vol. XCII, issue 1 (Winter): 118-139.

Hutchings, W.B. and William Ruddick eds. 1993. Thomas Gray; Contemporary Essays. Liverpool: University of Liverpool Press.

Keener, Frederick. 2012. Implication, Readers’ Resources, and Thomas Gray’s Pindaric Odes. Newark: University of Delaware Press.

Lee, M. Owen. 1996. Virgil as Orpheus: A Study of the Georgics. Albany: SUNY Press.

Lonsdale, Roger. 1987. “Gray’s Elegy: A Poem of Moral Choice and Resolution.” In Modern Critical Interpretations: Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard. H Bloom ed. New York: Chelsea House.

Lowrie, Michelle. 1992. Horace’s Narrative Odes. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Mackail, J.W. 1950. Virgil’s Works: The Aeneid, Eclogues, Georgics. New York: Modern Library.

McCarthy, B. Eugene. 1997. Thomas Gray: The Progress of a Poet. Madison, NJ: Fairleigh Dickenson University Press.

Manlove, C.N. 1978. Literature and Reality, 1600-1800. London: Macmillan.

Mason, William. 2007. Poems and Letters of Thomas Gray: With Memoirs of His Life and Writings. Whitefish, MT: Kessinger Publishing.

Price, Martin. 1990. “Sacred to Secular: Thomas Gray and the Cultivation of the Literary.” In Howard D. Weinbrot and Martin Price eds. Context, Influence, and Mid-Eighteenth-Century Poetry. Los Angeles: University of California Press.

Reed, Amy Louise. 1924, rpt. 1962. The Background of Gray’s Elegy: A Study in the Taste for Melancholy Poetry 1700-1751. New York: Columbia University Press, rpt. New York: Russell & Russell.

Rossly, Felicity. 1993. “Good Humour and the Agelasts: Horace, Pope, and Gray.” In Horace… Poet,” Criticism: A Quarterly for Literature and the Arts. Vol. 35: 1993: 589-608.

Rouse, W.H.D. trans. 1983. Lucretius, De Rerum Natura. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Shepherd, W.G., trans. 1983. Horace: The Complete Odes and Epodes. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.

Turner, Katherine. 2015. “Thomas Gray.” In Oxford Handbooks Online. Subject Literature, Literary Studies – 1701 to 1800., Literary Studies – Poetry and Poets Online Publication March 2015 DOI:

Weinbrot, Howard. 1978. “Gray's Elegy: A Poem of Moral Choice and Resolution.” Studies in English Literature, Vol. 18: 537-51.

Weinfield, Henry. 1991. The Poet Without a Name: Gray’s Elegy and the Problem of History. Carbondale: Southern Illinois Press.

West, David. 1995. Horace Odes I: Carpe Diem. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Wilkinson, L.P. 1968. Horace and His Lyric Poetry. Cambridge: At the University Press.

Williams, Anne. 1984. “Elegy into Lyric: Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard.” Chapter 6 in Prophetic Strain: The Greater Lyric in the Eighteenth Century. Chicago and London: University of Chicago.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6667/interface.10.2019.73

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2019 Kirill Ole Thompson

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

 

Copyright © 2016. All Rights Reserved | Interface | ISSN: 2519-1268