Them Style.form
Them Style.form
Summary
Besides mourning the loss of someone, the speaker in the elegy reminds the reader
that all people will die one day. Death is an unavoidable and natural thing in
everyone’s life. When one dies today, tomorrow, a stranger will see the person’s
tombstone. Out of curiosity, he will ask about the person buried there to a villager.
The villager will reply that he knew the man. He would add that he had seen him in
various spots. Sometimes, he will also remark that he had stopped seeing the man
one day, and then there was the tombstone.
In the poem, Gray, the poet himself, writes the epitaph of his own. He says that his
life is full of sadness and depression. However, he feels proud of his knowledge. He
calls it incomparable. In addition to this, he says that ‘No one is perfect in this world.’
So, he asks the reader not to judge anyone in the graveyard. Each and every soul is
different and takes rest for eternity in the graveyard. In conclusion, the poet, through
the speaker, ends the elegy by saying that death is an inevitable event in this world.
Also, he says that man’s efforts and his struggles to succeed in life comes to an end
in death. Thus, death conquers man regardless of his successes and/or failures in his
endeavors during his life.
To read the poem without analysis, click here. You can also read more poems by
Thomas Gray.
Stanzas 1 – 4
Stanzas 5 – 8
Stanzas 9 – 12
Also, the poet says that the poor are not inferior to the rich in death. Invariably,
every human life ends in death. The beauty, the wealth, the glory all lead to the
unavoidable end. The villager’s grave does not have the grandness in ceremonies
and tombstones. But, none of that can bring a person back to life. So, there is no
use of them. One should remember that no one knew that one of the dead villagers
may have achieved greatness in life. Therefore, there may be a ruler or a poet
buried in there.
Stanzas 13 – 16
But Knowledge to their eyes her ample page
Rich with the spoils of time did ne’er unroll;
Chill Penury repress’d their noble rage,
And froze the genial current of the soul.
In these stanzas, the poet remarks, the villagers who were dead would also have
talent. There might be a Milton or a Cromwell buried there. They did not get
opportunities to prove themselves. Like gems hidden deep under the ocean and like
desert flowers, they have perished without notice. Given opportunities, they would
have also succeeded. People would have read their deeds in history.
Stanzas 17 – 20
To put the content of these stanzas in a nutshell, the villagers did not wish to
involve in treachery and deceit. They were honest people and wished to lead
simple lives. So, they kept themselves away from the mad crowd of the cities and
kingdoms. They were true to themselves. They liked peace and honesty. But still,
there were markings to note their memory. The tombstones were simple. The
language was ordinary. But, there is truth in their memory.
Stanzas 21 – 24
The dead villagers rest in the graveyard without recognition. Also, this poem will
be a tribute to them. They lived their lives with morals. They died in the care of a
loving person. And, they closed their eyes with prayers in one’s eyes. One day, a
kind soul may come and enquire after the dead one out of curiosity.
Stanzas 25 – 29
If someone asks about the poet who rests in the graveyard, one of the villagers may
talk about him. A free-spirited man was the poet. He went to the mountains in the
morning, stood under the beach tree sometimes. Then, he went to the brook.
Besides, he was sometimes muttering his fancies. The villager would say that he
missed seeing the man one day. The poet was missing. The villager did not see him
in his usual places. But, he saw the funeral procession and how the man was buried
in the graveyard
Stanzas 30 – 33
THE EPITAPH
In this part of the poem, he says that his epitaph would read thus: Here lies the
young man who was not popular. His life was full of sorrow. Knowledge was his
only wealth. He gave his life to misery and all he longed was for a friend to
support. One need not look away to know about him. All that he did lies with him,
close to god in the lap of earth.
Themes
Setting
As far as the setting and mood go, the time is evening and every living being on
earth is retiring for the night. As the poem opens, the speaker is seen at the
churchyard; he hears the usual evening sounds. The church bell is ringing. The
shepherds and their cattle are returning home after the day’s work. The location is
rural. The atmosphere is subdued and melancholic. Darkness and silence fill the
place except for the hooting of the owl, the buzz of the beetle, and the ringing of
the bells. Regardless of all this gloom, the speaker stands in the middle of
tombstones in the graveyard. And while there, he imagines the lives of the dead
people who silently sleep there.