4. Elegy:
An elegy is a poem of having serious thought, especially, written in
memory or lamentation (weeping/expression of grief) at the death of
someone very close to the person. It is written in elegiac meter.
In the elegiac couplet, each couplet
consists of a hexameter verse followed by a pentameter
verse. It has its origin in
classical Greek and Latin literature, in which it addressed various
subjects including love, sorrow, and politics characterized by their metric
forms.
It is derived from the Greek word ‘elegus’, which means to lament.
Elegy is composed to honour the life of
a single individual of high importance to the poet, society, or the nation.
But
in English literature, particularly since the sixteenth century, an
elegy has come to acquire the status of a poem of lamentation on the death
of someone. The poet chooses the meter according to his requirement.
Pastoral Elegy: In this form of elegy, the subject is represented following the traditional convention. There is an idealised shepherd in idealised pastoral background. It follows a formal pattern.
It begins expressing grief and the Muse is also invoked to help the poet express his grief appropriately.
In Greek mythology, there are nine muses who are called the goddesses of various arts such as music, dance, poetry, etc.
The poet describes the funeral procession, mourning through various objects of nature, and some lines
on the unkind death, and finally, the poem ends with the acceptance of the
inevitable.
2. Thyrsis (1867) written by Mathew Arnold
on the death of the poet Arthur Hugh Clough
3. An Elegy Written in a Country
Churchyard (1751) by Thomas Gray. It is a tribute paid by the poet to the
generation of the humble and unknown villagers buried in the cemetery
(graveyard) of the village churchyard.
In literature dirge, threnody, monody, and lament are variations of almost the same theme. They are generally shorter versions of the elegy".