Front cover image for Gray

Gray

Edmund Gosse (Author)
Thomas Gray (1716{u2013}71) was one of the most influential poets of the eighteenth century, and is probably best remembered today for his Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard. In this biography of Gray, first published in the first 'English Men of Letters' series in 1882, poet and critic Edmund Gosse (1849{u2013}1928) delivers a sympathetic account of his subject, offering both a traditional chronological narrative of Gray's life, from his schooldays at Eton, through his travels abroad and his academic career at Cambridge (though he was appointed professor of modern history in 1768, failing health meant that he never delivered any lectures), and an analysis of his poetry. In the book's last chapter, Gosse laments the lack of recognition that Gray had received in England since his death: Dr Johnson is criticised especially for his writings on Gray - 'barren and meagre of fact to the last degree'
eBook, English, 1882
publisher not identified, Cambridge University Press, Place of publication not identified, Cambridge, 1882
1 online resource (242 pages) : PDF file(s).
9781139083775, 9781108034517, 1139083775, 1108034519
1117901141
Print version:
Prefatory note; 1. Childhood and early college life; 2. The Grand Tour; 3. Stoke-Pogis - death of West - first English poems; 4. Life at Cambridge; 5. The Elegy - six poems - death of Gray's aunt and mother; 6. The Pindaric Odes; 7. British Museum - Norton Nicholls; 8. Life at Cambridge - English travels; 9. Bonstetten - death; 10. Posthumous.
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015)