Thomas Gray
Thomas Gray (1716-1771) was an English poet and scholar, often regarded as a significant figure in the transition from neoclassicism to Romanticism in literature. Born in London, he was the sole survivor of twelve siblings and faced a difficult childhood due to his father's neglectful behavior. His education at Eton College and later Cambridge University shaped his intellectual pursuits, where he developed a deep appreciation for classical poetry and formed friendships with notable contemporaries, including Horace Walpole.
Gray is best known for his meticulously crafted poems, including “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard,” which highlights themes of nature, mortality, and the human condition. Although he produced a limited body of work, his poetry reflects a blend of neoclassical formality and emerging romantic sentiments. Gray also had a keen interest in various disciplines, including history, philosophy, and the arts, which informed his writing. He led a reclusive life, struggled with health issues, and turned down the position of poet laureate, valuing artistic integrity over fame. His legacy remains influential, marking him as a pivotal figure in the evolution of English poetry.
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Thomas Gray
English poet
- Born: December 26, 1716
- Birthplace: London, England
- Died: July 30, 1771
- Place of death: Cambridge, England
Biography
In judging the poetic output of Thomas Gray, two schools of thought have gradually developed. One holds that he is the most distinguished of the minor poets; the other, that he is assuredly the least prolific of the major ones. Whichever view finally prevails, it is certainly true that Gray was concerned with the quality rather than the quantity of his verse. Essentially a scholar, with scholarly instincts, Gray had a vast knowledge of history, philosophy, politics, languages, and literature; he also had an avid interest in painting, architecture, and gardening. While writing his poetry, he shaped and reshaped his lines with a patience and discipline almost unmatched in the annuals of English literature. To call his best work the ultimate expression of neoclassical art would be only half accurate; it also contains, sometimes half-hidden, the seeds of a momentous change in English poetry.
![Portrait by John Giles Eccardt, 1747–1748 By Painter John Giles Eccardt [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons 89313501-73674.jpg](https://imageserver.ebscohost.com/img/embimages/ers/sp/embedded/89313501-73674.jpg?ephost1=dGJyMNHX8kSepq84xNvgOLCmsE2epq5Srqa4SK6WxWXS)
Born at Cornhill in London in 1716, Gray was the only one of a family of twelve children to survive infancy. His father, like John Milton’s, was a money scrivener; he was also a brutal, neglectful parent and something of a ne’er-do-well. As a result Gray’s parents separated, and Gray’s mother joined her sister in a millinery establishment, which prospered sufficiently to allow Gray to begin attending Eton College at the age of eight. His years at Eton were idyllic. Here he became close friends with Richard West, son of the lord chancellor of Ireland, and with Horace Walpole, the prime minister’s son. Gray was a member of the “Quadruple Alliance,” a group of intellectual students dedicated to classical poetry. A career at Cambridge followed, which, with minor interruptions, continued to the end of his life.
Gray interrupted his studies at Cambridge, which began in 1734, to tour Italy and France from 1739 to 1741 in the company of young Walpole. The trip ended in Reggio, Italy, in a quarrel that temporarily disrupted the friendship. After his return to England Gray postponed his return to Cambridge for two further years, during which he lived with his mother at the village of Stoke Poges. Here, in 1742, he wrote his first important poems, including “Ode to the Spring,” “Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College,” and “Hymn to Adversity.” In June, 1742, Gray was shocked to learn of the death of Richard West. The following October he returned to Cambridge, and about the same time he started writing “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard,” which was published in 1751. At Cambridge, Gray took up residence first at Peterhouse and then at Pembroke College. He received his bachelor of laws (LL.B.) degree in 1743. Two years later, he reconciled with Walpole, who became the one who often persuaded Gray to publish his poems. At Cambridge, Gray lived a quiet, uneventful, and aloof existence. The poet Christopher Smart, a fellow at Pembroke, recalled Gray as a “little, prim, fastidious man, distinguished by a short, shuffling step.”
Gray’s significance as a poet far outreaches the slenderness of his literary output. Discernible in his work is an interest in nature and in the past that is curiously at variance with the rigid tenets of neoclassicism. A dominant theme in Gray’s work is that of his relationship with humankind, an interest that places him with the forerunners of the Romanticism of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth. Gray’s role as a transitional poet is especially well illustrated by “The Bard” (1757) and by his later odes, “The Fatal Sisters” (1761) and “The Descent of Odin” (1761).
Gray never married. When Colley Cibber died in 1757 Gray was offered the poet laureateship of England, which he refused because the post had acquired a low repute. In 1768 he accepted the position of professor of history and modern languages at Cambridge. He never gave a lecture, however. Indolent and melancholic, he had to force himself to work. He was inspired only at long intervals and then briefly. Gray’s health was always fragile, and he suffered from various psychological and physical ailments, which included an anxiety neurosis and a weak constitution. In later years he was afflicted with painful attacks of gout, a condition that had been responsible for the deaths of both his parents. When he died in Cambridge on July 30, 1771, Gray was buried beside his mother in the churchyard at Stoke Poges.
Bibliography
Bloom, Harold, ed. Thomas Gray’s “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard.” New York: Chelsea House, 1987. Gray’s elegy is probably the eighteenth century’s single most celebrated poem, and it remains the subject of much critical debate. This study brings together a number of important essays on the elegy, spanning several decades.
Downey, James, and Ben Jones, eds. Fearful Joy: Papers from the Thomas Gray Bicentenary Conference at Carleton University. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1974. These essays, presented at Carleton University in 1971 (the two hundredth anniversary of Gray’s death), provide an excellent “source book” for students of Gray. All aspects of Gray’s life, times, and poetry are addressed. Included is a handsome series of early illustrations of his work, many by the great artist-poet William Blake.
Ketton-Cremer, R. W. Thomas Gray: A Biography. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1955. A solid, well-written biography, very much in the “life and works” tradition. Clearly written and well researched, this remains one of the best accounts of Gray’s life. Contains an impressive set of illustrations.
McCarthy, B. Eugene. Thomas Gray: The Progress of a Poet. Madison, N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1997. Critical interpretation of selected works by Gray. Includes bibliographical references and index.
Mack, Robert L. Thomas Gray: A Life. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2000. Incorporates recent revisionary scholarship on Gray as well as original archival research on the poet’s family and formative years. Casts new light on Gray’s personality and on the psychological and sexual tensions that defined his compelling poetry.
Sitter, John. Literary Loneliness in Mid-Eighteenth Century England. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1982. Sitter’s study of the major poetry and fiction of the “Age of Sensibility” is crucial to an understanding of the contexts within which Gray’s poetry can be most productively read. Full of important insights into Gray and the historical period.