1891]. Starr/J.R. 14.1-9 Where ... heap,] "Wakefield quotes from Parnell's ''Night [...]" J. Bradshaw, 1903 [1st ed. Garrod pointed out that, without the four stanzas later rejected by G., the first version of the Elegy in the Eton MS contains 18 stanzas or 72 ll. 47.4-6 rod ... empire] "Mitford quotes Ovid [Heroides] Ep. The poet refused, and wrote next day to Horace Walpole, directing him to bring it out in pamphlet form. H.W. bed.] Spenser, Shepheardes Calender, 'Jan'. "J. Hendrickson, 1966. "Not winds, as so commonly printed. '' bed.] (Witness the 'uncouth rhymes' and inscriptions by which even these insignificant and ignorant dead strive to preserve their identity.)". Hendrickson, 1966. "Mitford quotes Sir Thomas Browne, Religio Medici, section xiii (verse): ''Rich with the spoils of nature.''". Gray told Dr. Gregory 'with a good deal of acrimony' that it 'owed its popularity entirely to the subject, and that the public would have received it as well if it had been written in prose.' Garrod's argument is hardly tenable. Ian Jack (see headnote) compares Virgil, Georgics ii 484: frigidus obstiterit circum praecordia sanguis, translated by Thomson, Preface to 2nd edn of Winter: 'If the cold current freezes round my heart'; see also Agrippina 177-8 (p. 42 above).". The three extant holograph MSS. 1919]. "the reference is to the heath mentioned in the rejected stanza which came after line 100.". "Cf. share.] H.W. Odes I iv 13-4: pallida Mors aequo pulsat pede pauperum tabernas / regumque turres (Pale Death with foot impartial knocks at the poor man's cottage and at princes' palaces); I xxviii 15-6: sed omnes una manet nox, / et calcanda semel via leti (But a common night awaiteth every man, and Death's path must be trodden once for all); and II xvii 32-4: aequa tellus / pauperi recluditur / regumque pueris (For all alike doth Earth unlock her bosom - for the poor man and for princes' sons). Starr/J.R. refers to anyone else in his revised version of these lines. The madding/cool antithesis also occurs in Agrippina 83 (p. 36). 1898]. Hendrickson, 1966. Of the innumerable passages that might be quoted in illustration of this line, perhaps that given by Mitford from Petrarch [Pte I. Canzone IV.] "The line in Fraser MS. stands thus: 'Some village Cato with dauntless Breast.' "Cp. Death?] - Original MS. [Mason MS.]". 1898]. Lost x 777 and xi 536; Dryden, Of the Pythagorean Philosophy 373: 'Lies on the lap of Earth'. ''I rather wonder that he rejected this [omitted] stanza, as it not only has the same sort of Doric delicacy, which charms us peculiarly in this part of the Poem, but also compleats the account of his whole day: whereas, this Evening scene being omitted, we have only his Morning walk, and his Noon-tide repose.'' "And buried Ashes glow with [...]" R. Lonsdale, 1969. 35.1 Awaits] "The reading 'Await' has no [...]" D.C. Tovey, 1922 [1st ed. (This may have been the argument used by Mason against Walpole's objection to his dating.) "the path leading (from the main road) to the church. By combining with these events a quantity of meteorological information, Newman demonstrated to his own satisfaction that he possessed an 'abundance of evidence' for identifying the moment at which G. began writing the Elegy as 8 p.m. on 18 Aug. 1746. [...] G[ray]. 116.8 thorn.'] "Incense hallowd in Eton, with kindled at written below.". Function of Theme. "Mitford compares Sir T. Browne, Religio Medici [Pt. thorn.'] 1891]. Last Monday, however, Blanco finally had a chance to let his poetry take center stage. 1891]. 34[)]; and ('to a Painted Lady' a poem doubtfully attributed to Donne), 'But case there be a difference in the mould' &c. (in case, probably).". "Mutt'ring his fond conceits (wayward fancies, written above) he went to (del) rove: (loved [del] would he, written above) Fraser MS.". 101.5-8 of ... beech] "Cf. "Written above a deletion in Eton, perhaps In.". Poole/L. "The Epitaph. 1898]. The similarities to Joseph Warton's Ode to Evening [...] would support a date after 4 December 1746. "Wakefield quotes from Spenser's ''Shepherd's Kalendar'': - ''But to the root bent his sturdic stroak, / And made many wounds in the wast oak.'' Many prayers, but one light 'Approach and read (for thou can'st read) the lay, 'Graved on the stone beneath yon aged thorn. 62.1-8 The ... despise,] "Cp. I rather take it as a poetical turn, a repetition that gives vividness to the speech of the old swain, and well brought in as he had not hitherto personally addressed the kindred spirit. 1891]. 105.1-4 'Hard ... wood,] "With Gestures quaint E[ton College [...]" H.W. Alexander Huber, 2000. 105.6 smiling] "frowning edd 1-2, 6-7, [...]" R. Lonsdale, 1969. "John Hampden (1594-1643), imprisoned in 1627 for refusing to pay a share of a forced loan by Charles I.".
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