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词汇 elegy
释义

Definition of elegy in English:

elegy

nounPlural elegies ˈɛlɪdʒiˈɛlədʒi
  • 1(in modern literature) a poem of serious reflection, typically a lament for the dead.

    (现代文学中的)感伤怀旧的诗歌;挽歌,挽诗

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Addison was buried in Westminster Abbey, and lamented in an elegy by Tickell.
    • The elegy, as real poems do, brings us to a place where words give way to the music of silence, where we approach the unsayable and bow before it.
    • That final line transforms the poem into an elegy for his father, the source of lament that drove the speaker into nature and into thoughts of dying.
    • WH Auden made the strongest case against literature in his elegy for WB Yeats: ‘Now Ireland has her weather and her madness still / For poetry makes nothing happen’.
    • I would argue that what links these modern elegies is the focus on a relationship ruptured prior to death.
    • It is perhaps best, then, to consider this a new category of elegy with two extremes: those elegies that achieve reconciliation, as some of Plumly's poems do, and those that fail to achieve reconciliation, such as those by Plath.
    • The love poem has turned into something else with the death of the beloved, the acute sadness in the poem seeming to move it toward the elegy or threnody.
    • The bells are on buoys in Sydney harbour, and the poem is partly an elegy and meditation on Joe Lynch, a friend of the poet's, who had one night fallen from a commuter ferry and drowned.
    • I sometimes think that my poems are elegies for that lost life.
    • And unlike the elegies the sonnets are predominantly poems of invocation, apostrophe and direct address, he writes.
    • As a result, modern elegies more often than not break with the decorum of earlier modes of mourning and become melancholic, self-centered, or mocking.
    • We need laments and elegies: Innocents have died and will again, and the struggle to hope is hard and haunted by loss.
    • Except for writers of obituaries and elegies, no serious biographer judges his subject under the aspect of eternity.
    • Belcher mentions Dylan Thomas's elegy for his father in connection with this piece.
    • The texts I shall consider are fascinating in themselves, but they also contribute to our understanding of modern elegy in general.
    • That this is an elegy only makes the poem more poignant, makes the grief of the persona part of the political indignation, complicates the emotional nexus of the voice.
    • That is, modern family elegies, though occasioned by death, do not seek compensation for that loss.
    • The poem is a whimsical elegy on the death of a friend's husband, focusing on the denial and hope and implausible resilience of the survivor, in the proud silent puzzlement of a cat left alone.
    • The biography then turns to extra-familial influences, including Surrey's friendship with Henry Fitzroy, the Earl of Richmond, for whom he would invent the English sonnet in his Windsor elegies.
    • In order to exhume further the elegy in the Elegiac Sonnets, we now might consider the extent to which the work resonates with traditional notions of ‘elegiac’ and the elegy as a poem of mourning.
    Synonyms
    funeral poem/song, burial hymn, lament, dirge, plaint, requiem, keening
    Irish &amp Scottish keen, coronach
    rare threnody, threnode
  • 2(in Greek and Latin verse) a poem written in elegiac couplets, as notably by Catullus and Propertius.

    (希腊和罗马诗歌中的)挽歌对句诗

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Originally, the Greek elegy expressed grief; but the form broadened widely with Latin adaptations, such as Ovid's love elegies, Amores, to include almost any kind of subject.
    • I suspect few readers of these elegies will come sufficiently prepared in Greek mythology and Roman legend not to make heavy use of Mr. Katz's 31 pages of notes.
    • The Echo Gate includes versions of the Latin love elegy.
    • It refers to the fact that before Catullus and his poems to Lesbia, there was really no such thing as love poetry in the fullest sense, and that the romantic elegy was the invention of a later poet, Propertius.

Origin

Early 16th century: from French élégie, or via Latin, from Greek elegeia, from elegos 'mournful poem'.

Definition of elegy in US English:

elegy

nounˈeləjēˈɛlədʒi
  • 1A poem of serious reflection, typically a lament for the dead.

    (现代文学中的)感伤怀旧的诗歌;挽歌,挽诗

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I sometimes think that my poems are elegies for that lost life.
    • WH Auden made the strongest case against literature in his elegy for WB Yeats: ‘Now Ireland has her weather and her madness still / For poetry makes nothing happen’.
    • We need laments and elegies: Innocents have died and will again, and the struggle to hope is hard and haunted by loss.
    • The texts I shall consider are fascinating in themselves, but they also contribute to our understanding of modern elegy in general.
    • That is, modern family elegies, though occasioned by death, do not seek compensation for that loss.
    • That final line transforms the poem into an elegy for his father, the source of lament that drove the speaker into nature and into thoughts of dying.
    • In order to exhume further the elegy in the Elegiac Sonnets, we now might consider the extent to which the work resonates with traditional notions of ‘elegiac’ and the elegy as a poem of mourning.
    • As a result, modern elegies more often than not break with the decorum of earlier modes of mourning and become melancholic, self-centered, or mocking.
    • The love poem has turned into something else with the death of the beloved, the acute sadness in the poem seeming to move it toward the elegy or threnody.
    • The biography then turns to extra-familial influences, including Surrey's friendship with Henry Fitzroy, the Earl of Richmond, for whom he would invent the English sonnet in his Windsor elegies.
    • Except for writers of obituaries and elegies, no serious biographer judges his subject under the aspect of eternity.
    • And unlike the elegies the sonnets are predominantly poems of invocation, apostrophe and direct address, he writes.
    • The elegy, as real poems do, brings us to a place where words give way to the music of silence, where we approach the unsayable and bow before it.
    • The bells are on buoys in Sydney harbour, and the poem is partly an elegy and meditation on Joe Lynch, a friend of the poet's, who had one night fallen from a commuter ferry and drowned.
    • It is perhaps best, then, to consider this a new category of elegy with two extremes: those elegies that achieve reconciliation, as some of Plumly's poems do, and those that fail to achieve reconciliation, such as those by Plath.
    • I would argue that what links these modern elegies is the focus on a relationship ruptured prior to death.
    • That this is an elegy only makes the poem more poignant, makes the grief of the persona part of the political indignation, complicates the emotional nexus of the voice.
    • Addison was buried in Westminster Abbey, and lamented in an elegy by Tickell.
    • Belcher mentions Dylan Thomas's elegy for his father in connection with this piece.
    • The poem is a whimsical elegy on the death of a friend's husband, focusing on the denial and hope and implausible resilience of the survivor, in the proud silent puzzlement of a cat left alone.
    Synonyms
    funeral poem, funeral song, burial hymn, lament, dirge, plaint, requiem, keening
  • 2(in Greek and Roman poetry) a poem written in elegiac couplets, as notably by Catullus and Propertius.

    (希腊和罗马诗歌中的)挽歌对句诗

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I suspect few readers of these elegies will come sufficiently prepared in Greek mythology and Roman legend not to make heavy use of Mr. Katz's 31 pages of notes.
    • The Echo Gate includes versions of the Latin love elegy.
    • It refers to the fact that before Catullus and his poems to Lesbia, there was really no such thing as love poetry in the fullest sense, and that the romantic elegy was the invention of a later poet, Propertius.
    • Originally, the Greek elegy expressed grief; but the form broadened widely with Latin adaptations, such as Ovid's love elegies, Amores, to include almost any kind of subject.

Origin

Early 16th century: from French élégie, or via Latin, from Greek elegeia, from elegos ‘mournful poem’.

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