“The Philosophy of Tears”: Sense(s) and sensibility in some graveyard poems

This essay revisits the involved relationship between the senses, sense and sensibility in four eighteenth-century poems customarily assembled under the term “graveyard poetry” while foregrounding the emotional and material marker, the tear, and its presence (or absence) in the poems. The poems in q...

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Main Author: John Baker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut du Monde Anglophone 2016-12-01
Series:Etudes Epistémè
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/episteme/1323
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author John Baker
author_facet John Baker
author_sort John Baker
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description This essay revisits the involved relationship between the senses, sense and sensibility in four eighteenth-century poems customarily assembled under the term “graveyard poetry” while foregrounding the emotional and material marker, the tear, and its presence (or absence) in the poems. The poems in question are Thomas Parnell’s “A Night-Piece on Death” (1721), Robert Blair’s The Grave (1743), Edward Young’s Night Thoughts (1742-1745) and Thomas Gray’s Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard (1751). How does the poet put into words an experience of loss and bereavement and come to terms with the anticipation of his own inevitable demise? Gray’s Elegy brings the genre to its apogee, if not to its conclusion, in the sense that it is itself a remarkable patchwork made up of allusions to, echoes and references from, earlier poems. It is in its way a cento that can seem, at least in part, to be fashioned from amended quotes. Gray appears to be so steeped in the poetry, be it of the recent or more distant past, that his genius expresses itself here in his capacity to refine this poetry, to transform it, producing in the process something at once perfectly traditional, conventional and recognisable, and enigmatically new and curiously incomplete.
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spelling doaj-art-8c144fa649ea4f94a2c77d1ba4fbeea02025-08-20T03:47:25ZengInstitut du Monde AnglophoneEtudes Epistémè1634-04502016-12-013010.4000/episteme.1323“The Philosophy of Tears”: Sense(s) and sensibility in some graveyard poemsJohn BakerThis essay revisits the involved relationship between the senses, sense and sensibility in four eighteenth-century poems customarily assembled under the term “graveyard poetry” while foregrounding the emotional and material marker, the tear, and its presence (or absence) in the poems. The poems in question are Thomas Parnell’s “A Night-Piece on Death” (1721), Robert Blair’s The Grave (1743), Edward Young’s Night Thoughts (1742-1745) and Thomas Gray’s Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard (1751). How does the poet put into words an experience of loss and bereavement and come to terms with the anticipation of his own inevitable demise? Gray’s Elegy brings the genre to its apogee, if not to its conclusion, in the sense that it is itself a remarkable patchwork made up of allusions to, echoes and references from, earlier poems. It is in its way a cento that can seem, at least in part, to be fashioned from amended quotes. Gray appears to be so steeped in the poetry, be it of the recent or more distant past, that his genius expresses itself here in his capacity to refine this poetry, to transform it, producing in the process something at once perfectly traditional, conventional and recognisable, and enigmatically new and curiously incomplete.https://journals.openedition.org/episteme/1323sensibilityEighteenth-century poetrygraveyard poetrythe sensestearselegy
spellingShingle John Baker
“The Philosophy of Tears”: Sense(s) and sensibility in some graveyard poems
Etudes Epistémè
sensibility
Eighteenth-century poetry
graveyard poetry
the senses
tears
elegy
title “The Philosophy of Tears”: Sense(s) and sensibility in some graveyard poems
title_full “The Philosophy of Tears”: Sense(s) and sensibility in some graveyard poems
title_fullStr “The Philosophy of Tears”: Sense(s) and sensibility in some graveyard poems
title_full_unstemmed “The Philosophy of Tears”: Sense(s) and sensibility in some graveyard poems
title_short “The Philosophy of Tears”: Sense(s) and sensibility in some graveyard poems
title_sort the philosophy of tears sense s and sensibility in some graveyard poems
topic sensibility
Eighteenth-century poetry
graveyard poetry
the senses
tears
elegy
url https://journals.openedition.org/episteme/1323
work_keys_str_mv AT johnbaker thephilosophyoftearssensesandsensibilityinsomegraveyardpoems